MARK R. HORNAK, District Judge.
Pending before the Court are the Defendant Ruby Tuesday's Motions to Dismiss, Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) and for Summary Judgment, Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. (ECF Nos. 79, 86). The Motion to Dismiss is premised on the assertion that even when read in the broadest, most "plaintiff friendly" terms, the Plaintiff Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's ("EEOC") Complaint is long on legal conclusions and summary assertions and short on the level of factual predicate demanded by the Supreme Court's holdings in Twombly and Iqbal
The Motion for Summary Judgment contends that the efforts of the EEOC in the conciliation process required by Congress in Section 7(b) of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, ("ADEA"), 29 U.S.C. § 626(b), fell so far short of the mark, no matter how deferential the standard applied by this Court, that it was effectively not conciliation at all.
The EEOC responds by arguing that the Complaint fulfills the pleading minimums set forth in Fed.R.Civ.P. 8 even when tested against the currently-applicable measure, that Defendant's Motion to Dismiss comes woefully late, and that as to its conciliation obligations, it has done its statutory duty. The EEOC further argues that the relief requested by the Defendant in each Motion — dismissal of the case as to the former, and judgment in its favor as to the latter — is wholly disproportionate to any pleading/conciliation misstep on the EEOC's part, and that the proper course, if there is merit to either of the Motions, is to allow for the amendment of the Complaint, and to allow for conciliation now if the Court concludes that it has not yet happened.
For the reasons that follow, the Motion to Dismiss is denied without prejudice, but the Court will order that the EEOC provide a more definite statement. The Motion for Summary Judgment is denied without prejudice, but the Court shall order that fact discovery in this case be paused, and the statutory conciliation process shall now occur over a period of forty-five (45) days, during which the EEOC shall engage in the conciliation of the claims asserted in this civil action under the general supervision of the Court. The Defendant's request for attorneys' fees and costs is denied without prejudice.
This case presents the paradigm example of parties to litigation too often speaking past one another with seemingly exquisite precision. Since the issues before the Court are narrow, and relate to very specific matters, the Court will not endeavor to describe every twist and turn in this civil action's nearly three (3) year presence on this Court's docket.
This case began with a Charge of Discrimination filed on December 28, 2008 by a single employee at the Defendant's facility in Altoona, Pennsylvania, charging unlawful discrimination based on sex and retaliation under Title VII of Civil Rights Act of 1964, later amended on January 20, 2009 to allege age discrimination in violation of the ADEA, 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq. (ECF No. 101 at 7-8). Thereafter, the EEOC investigated as authorized and directed by law, and requested and received a significant amount of information from the Defendant regarding its workforce and hiring practices. (ECF No. 101 at 8-9). The Defendant generally denied engaging any unlawful conduct, and affirmed its belief that it at all times complied with its legal duties to provide for a discrimination-free workplace.
This process played out over the next few months, and ended in August 2009, when the EEOC issued a written Determination to Defendant, dated August 25, 2009, concluding as an administrative matter that it had found reasonable cause to believe that the Defendant had unlawfully discriminated against the Charging Party based on sex, and also that it had engaged in a pattern and practice of discrimination based on age in six (6) of its restaurants in the Western Pennsylvania vicinity. (ECF No. 87-3 at 15, 101 at 10). The EEOC advised the Defendant that it would promptly seek to conciliate the dispute with the Defendant, and it forwarded to Defendant a proposed conciliation agreement, (ECF No. 87-3 at 17), setting forth the points that the EEOC required as part of any conciliated resolution of the claims as advanced by the EEOC. It was allegedly received by Defendant on or about September 2, 2009.
That Determination and proposed conciliation agreement provided the Defendant with thirteen (13) days from the date it was prepared and dated by the EEOC (and, according to Defendant, seven (7) days from when it was received) to respond. The Defendant responded on September 3, 2009, (ECF No. 87-3 at 24), by asking for an additional thirty (30) days to respond to the EEOC's Determination and conciliation position.
This gave the Defendant about 9 or 10 days (from the date of the EEOC's response letter) to respond to the first EEOC demand that was specific as to the amount of money the Defendant would be expected to pay as part of a resolution of the matter. Defendant responded on September 15, 2009, (ECF No. 87-3 at 26), with a counter offer as to the Charging Party's claims, and an expressed willingness to engage in further conciliation discussions as to the broader claims pressed by the EEOC.
Over the next many hundreds of days, the parties have engaged in fact discovery in this case, in fits and starts. At one point, the parties agreed to a stay of the action to allow for discussions, inter partes, regarding a possible resolution of this dispute, but those efforts were apparently unavailing. (Order dated August 23, 2010, ECF No. 23). Thereafter, the EEOC sought, and the Defendant opposed, a bifurcation of discovery, seeking to focus first only on liability issues, and remedial matters thereafter. (ECF Nos. 32, 35). That motion was denied by this Court. (Order dated December 27, 2011, ECF No. 41). The Court ruled on several intervening Motions to Compel and for Protective Orders, (ECF Nos. 63, 65), and since then, this Court has held numerous status conferences, and has issued an opinion granting in part the parties joint request for an extension of discovery.
The heart of the Defendant's argument to dismiss the case is that the EEOC's Complaint is a paradigm example of the
On these points, the parties are each correct. The Defendant answered to Complaint on January 27, 2010. That was thirty-six (36) months ago. Since then, the parties have taken at least forty (40) depositions, including those noticed by the Defendant of EEOC representatives. Much discovery work has occurred, and the Defendant has been provided with a series of opportunities to learn from the witnesses it has identified what it is that those individuals know (or do not know) about the claims in this case.
The rub is that those facts may, or may not, be the foundation upon which the EEOC, as Plaintiff, claims liability will be found at trial. The EEOC avers that the Defendant will owe very substantial monetary relief of at least the amount demanded at the conciliation stage, along with being ordered by this Court to take swift and strong remedial action to end unlawful practices as alleged by the EEOC. The EEOC has also advised the Court and the Defendant that it had a statistical basis for concluding that the Defendant violated the ADEA by basing employment decisions on age as a matter of "standing operating procedure" before it brought this lawsuit, (ECF No. 87-3, at 25), which is the very type of support commonly underlying the heart of an ADEA pattern and practice case. See Scharp v. Legacy Health Sys., No. 06-1213-MO, 2007 WL 756716, at *5 (D.Ore. Mar. 8, 2007). The EEOC nonetheless has declined to provide the Defendant with its statistical analysis, claiming that a privilege shields it from having to do so. Further, the EEOC contends that what is pled in the Complaint sufficiently puts the Defendant on notice of the claims against it, that it need not plead "evidence," and that the case against the Defendant will be fleshed out in discovery.
The claims asserted in this case are serious charges, and if proven true, the EEOC will be fulfilling its important mandate in bringing this case and in proving that liability, and then recovering an award of monetary and equitable relief on behalf of those harmed, as demanded by statute. That said, our system of pretrial practice, and any notion of due process, requires that the target of such consequential allegations know what the claim is, and the baseline of plausible facts that forms the basis of the claims that it will have to confront at trial. While to be sure, the discovery process will assist in developing that record, at least since Twombly and Iqbal, plaintiffs leveling a claim for relief are obligated to do more than simply state the conclusory basis for a claim, but instead must set out the plausible factual predicate for their allegations. They must "show" the plausible factual basis for the entitlement to relief.
Twombly and Iqbal stand for (at least) the proposition that the "notice" required by federal notice pleading means that the pleader must give notice not merely of the existence of a claim, but of the plausible factual foundation for that claim. See Fowler v. UPMC Shadyside, 578 F.3d 203, 211 (3d Cir.2009) (complaint must "show" an entitlement to relief with its alleged facts). The Complaint here
The Court concludes that the Complaint as pled falls so substantially short of the minimal level of "notice" that our Supreme Court now requires so as to fail to fulfill the standards required under Fed. R.Civ.P. 8, post-Twombly/Iqbal. There is no record basis for the Court to conclude that the intervening discovery has fundamentally filled that major gap in the record. See Benoit v. Ocwen Fin. Corp., 960 F.Supp. 287, 289 (S.D.Fla.1997).
At the same time, to grant the Defendant's Motion and dismiss the case on Twombly/Iqbal grounds now would run counter to the directive of our Court of Appeals that leave to amend in such cases should be liberally given, at least once, in order to allow a plaintiff to fill in the Twombly/Iqbal blanks. See Fletcher-Harlee Corp. v. Pote Concrete Contractors, Inc., 482 F.3d 247, 252 (3d Cir.2007). It would also fail to acknowledge that the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss comes so very late in the game and that the parties, including the Defendant, have had, and have used, a long intervening time period to engage in fact discovery. Here, where the parties, and this Court, have devoted years to the proceedings in this case, and the Defendant is well past the deadline for the filing of a Motion to Dismiss under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b), dismissal is not appropriate.
The Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment alleges a failure on the EEOC's part to fulfill its statutory conciliation obligations, and is based on a documentary record developed by the parties. It asserts that the EEOC failed to conciliate in that while it may have done so in form, it did not do so as a matter of substance. There is a fulsome documentary record of the actions and positions of both the EEOC and the Defendant in these regards, and while the parties hotly contest the import of those matters, neither appears to allege that there is a genuine issue of material fact as to that record.
The EEOC was required by law to attempt to conciliate the claims of age discrimination asserted here before filing suit, by using "informal methods of conciliation, conference and persuasion." 29 U.S.C. § 626(b). This is because of the statutory preference, a strong preference at that, for the resolution of such matters by such non-litigation processes. See EEOC v. Prudential Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass'n, 763 F.2d 1166, 1169 (10th Cir.), cert. denied, 474 U.S. 946, 106 S.Ct. 312, 88 L.Ed.2d 289 (1985); Moteles v. Univ. of Pa., 730 F.2d 913, 916-17 (3d Cir.), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 855, 105 S.Ct. 179, 83 L.Ed.2d 114 (1984). The conduct of that process is allocated to the EEOC, and courts may engage in only a more limited review of the performance of that obligation, as it is one entrusted to the EEOC by law. Further, conciliation efforts must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. Marshall v. Sun Oil Co., 605 F.2d 1331, 1334 (5th Cir.1979); EEOC v. Bloomberg L.P., 751 F.Supp.2d 628, 637 (S.D.N.Y. 2010). The question on the record presented here is whether in the context of the ADEA's statutory conciliation/persuasion/conference obligation, the EEOC has fulfilled its responsibility here. That means that the questions presented are not whether the EEOC conciliated as well as it could have, or whether it did so in the manner which this or any other court might prefer, or whether it used its very
In their submissions to the Court, the parties spend quite a bit of time sparring over matters related to the overall investigation of the underlying charge of discrimination, such as whether the EEOC provided enough information to Defendant fast enough, whether the Defendant asked enough precise questions of the EEOC soon enough, or whether the Defendant asked exactly the right questions when the EEOC forwarded its conciliation letter. (ECF No, 101 at 11-13). While those matters may be of some interest around the edges, they do not go to the heart of the matter. What is at the center of this issue is what unfolded once the EEOC issued its Determination.
By letter dated August 25, 2009, the EEOC advised the Defendant that it had found reasonable cause to believe that the Defendant had unlawfully discriminated against its job applicants based on their age as a matter of a pattern and practice, and set forth an array of more than a dozen potent remedial measures to which it sought the Defendant's agreement, not including the specific amount of any monetary payment by Defendant. (ECF Nos. 87-3 at 15, 101 at 10-11). The Defendant was given two (2) weeks to respond as to whether it would or would not take those actions. (ECF No. 101 at 11). The Defendant responded on September 3, 2009 by asking for thirty (30) additional days to respond. The EEOC responded on September 9, 2009 by stating (for the first time) that it was seeking more than $6 million in monetary relief, and providing the Defendant with nine (9) days to respond with its "best" offer to resolve the claims asserted by the EEOC. (ECF No. 87-3 at 25).
It is difficult for the Court to discern how the EEOC's actions here would indicate a meaningful desire to actually engage in a process of "persuasion," "conference" or "conciliation." See EEOC v. State of Arizona Dept. of Admin., 824 F.Supp. 898, 901 (D.Ariz.1991) (sufficiency of conciliation efforts should be evaluated in terms of one party's efforts with an eye to the other party's response). By any measure, a demand for the payment of more than $6 million dollars, coupled with nine (9) days to either say "yes" or to make a "best and final" response in these circumstances (which includes, as noted above, a demand for more than a dozen significant affirmative remedial measures) is so devoid of reasonableness as to lead this Court to the conclusion that it was not a meaningful, good faith conciliation effort. See Marshall v. Amer. Motors Corp., 475 F.Supp. 875, 878 (D.Mich.1979) (the measure of conciliation adequacy is stricter in those cases where substantial back pay is requested).
An exchange of pointed letters does not evidence a sincere effort to reach a meeting of the minds, especially in the context of an extraordinarily short set of response deadlines which were not driven by any externally imposed deadlines (such as, for instance, the imminent expiration of a statute of limitations).
Of particular import in this regard are the EEOC's Determination Letter of August 25, 2009 (which Defendant says that it received on September 1 or 2, 2009), Defendant's response of September 3, 2009, and the EEOC's follow up letter of September 9, 2009. The EEOC's August 25, 2009 letter generally set forth the basis for the EEOC's Determination as to why it believed Defendant violated the ADEA, and included detailed and expansive conciliation/settlement terms. Defendant's prompt response took no position on the merits, stated a desire to discuss a resolution, and sought thirty (30) additional days to formulate and then provide a response. The EEOC's September 9, 2009 response set out, for the first time, its $6 million settlement demand, and gave Defendant nine (9) days to respond with either an unqualified acceptance, or its "best" counteroffer. The EEOC provided no reason to Defendant as to why it needed such an answer, in that form, by September 18, 2009 rather than by the October 8, 2009 date Defendant requested, or why that "line in the sand" approach was in fact "conciliation." See EEOC v. Bimbo Bakeries USA, Inc., Civ. A. No. 09-1872, 2010 WL 598641, at *7 (M.D.Pa. Feb. 17, 2010).
Defendants' response on September 15, 2009 essentially denied liability generally and specifically as to the Charging Party, offered to mediate her claim, to pay her $27,500 in settlement, and reaffirmed what it described as its corporate non-discrimination policy and practices.
Further litigation of this matter may demonstrate that the Defendant, in hindsight, should have taken the deal offered by the EEOC in August 2009 because it turns out that it is liable to a large group of claimants for all of the reasons the EEOC has alleged. It may also demonstrate that the EEOC's position is without the necessary factual or legal support, and that it cannot prove its case. Or, what may result is something in between. It is that uncertainty of litigation outcome and the inherent time, expense, and delay in resolution by litigation that lie at the heart of the Congressional command that before this suit was filed, the EEOC was charged by law with attempting to eliminate the discriminatory practices alleged, and to secure voluntary compliance with the law, by the informal means set out in section 7(b) of the ADEA. This Court concludes that the conciliation communications from the EEOC do not demonstrate a good faith basis for a recipient of them to conclude that the EEOC was interested in any level of pre-litigation engagement aimed at an agreed-upon resolution. See Asplundh Tree Expert Co., 340 F.3d at 1260-61. Those communications instead lead inexorably to the conclusion that the EEOC expected, without any stated reason for the necessity of it being so, that the Defendant would and must either say "yes" to a multi-million dollar settlement demand on stunningly short notice, or offer up in the same short timeframe its "best and final" offer.
The EEOC offers little by way of argument as to why that approach demonstrates a sincere effort to reach an agreed-upon resolution of the claims that it asserted. Instead, the EEOC argues that it need not have done much at all, and that the authority of this Court to determine whether the EEOC has fulfilled its statutory conciliation obligations is sharply curtailed. (ECF No. 101 at 18-34). But, even when measured against that light standard, this Court has no difficulty in concluding on this record (and principally on the basis of the parties' correspondence over twenty-four (24) days in the late Summer of 2009) that the conciliation efforts here did not meet even the low standard proffered by the EEOC, and that even if the Court's power to consider those efforts may be constrained, it is not non-existent.
"Conciliation by letter" in such a substantial pattern and practice case would rarely constitute "conciliation." The EEOC's defense of what it did and did not do here strikes the Court as internally inconsistent, and inconsistent with a fair reading of the record. On the one hand, the EEOC argues that the Defendant was not really interested in conciliation, as its first response did not ask for the "theory" or basis of the EEOC's Determination, (ECF No. 101 at 11, 13), but then goes on to contend that it would have had no obligation to have provided it to the Defendant if it had been asked.
The EEOC may be correct that at the end of the day, Defendant's denial of liability would have been so hardened so as to foil any further conciliation efforts, but there is little about the EEOC's activity between August 25, 2009 and September 9, 2009 (and nothing about its Investigator's Letter of September 9, 2009) that permits this Court to conclude that it was engaged in any effort or "attempt" to resolve this matter by "conciliation" and "persuasion," as Congress has commanded. At best, its letters, unaccompanied by any effort to confer with or otherwise directly "persuade" the Defendant to voluntarily resolve these matters, were more akin "surface bargaining" than to an attempt at conciliation or persuasion. See EEOC v. La Rana Hawaii, LLC, 888 F.Supp.2d 1019, 1044-45 (D.Haw.2012).
At the same time, to dismiss the case now as Defendant requests, in the middle of discovery, after years of party and judicial investment in its disposition, would be wholly improvident and is a remedy disproportionate to the situation now presented. See Hugin Sweda, 750 F.Supp. at 168. The conciliation obligation, while statutorily critical to the overall litigation process, is only one precedent to the judicial resolution of the ADEA claims alleged. The far better course, and the one that is consistent with the very premise of the conciliation requirement and the status of where this case stands in this litigation process, is to require that the parties now engage in the conciliation process that should have occurred sooner. See id. This will not prejudice any rights of the EEOC, since it is an obligation that it has had all along, and one that it could have and should have meaningfully engaged in ab initio. It also will not prejudice the rights of the Defendant, since the factual record of what did and did not happen (when it should have) as to conciliation has existed for more than forty (40) months, and it is only now that the Defendant has elected to test its sufficiency by motion.
Whatever the breadth of the prerogatives reserved to the EEOC in the administrative and regulatory arena, once this suit was filed, the EEOC became a party litigant, bound by the obligations of a party to federal civil litigation, in a judicial
The Court will direct that the conciliation process mandated by law must now occur, that it occur over the next forty-five (45) days, and under the general supervision of the Court. The parties will be obliged to "meet and discuss" beginning at the settlement/case management conference set for January 23, 2013 as to the process which will be used to fulfill such conciliation obligations. See EEOC v. Evans Fruit Co., Inc., 872 F.Supp.2d 1107 (E.D.Wash.2012).
An appropriate order will enter.