Let's say you won your employment discrimination case. But before you are able to collect on the judgment, the employer files for bankruptcy. What happens next? Bankruptcy court is a specialized forum, with its own rules and procedures that bear little relationship to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure or the CPLR. This case provides some guidance on how to proceed.
The case is Fuller v. Rea, issued by the SDNY bankruptcy court on July 29, 2019. I represent Fuller, who defeated Rea and his company in an employment discrimination case before the State Division of Human Rights, which found that Rea terminated Fuller because she is transgender. The employer appealed that finding to the Appellate Division, which affirmed Fuller's victory. Rea then filed for bankruptcy. Now what?
After you get notice that the employer has filed for bankruptcy, you must cease and desist any collection efforts. Instead, you have to file a Proof of Claim with the bankruptcy court to stake your claim to your damages award. But that is not enough to get paid. If you are defending a judgment, you will have to file an Adversary Proceeding in bankruptcy court, which is a related case to the initial bankruptcy filing. The reason for this is that not all debts are discharged or extinguished as a result of the bankruptcy filing. Any debt that arises from a "willful" and "malicious" injury will not be discharged and the victim can legally pursue that debt once the employer (or the debtor) is able to extinguish his other debts through the bankruptcy court.
In our case, I filed an Adversary Proceeding with the bankruptcy court, claiming that Fuller's termination was willful and malicious. After Rea filed his Answer to that complaint, I moved for summary judgment, arguing the state court judgment should have collateral estoppel effect on whether Fuller's damages were the product of Rea's willful and malicious actions. Under this argument, there would be no need for discovery or a trial in bankruptcy court on this issue. In a ruling handed down on July 29, Chief Judge Morris agreed with us and ruled that Fuller's debt was the product of a willful and malicious injury, and that Rea is collaterally estopped from arguing otherwise since the State Division of Human Rights provided him with a full opportunity to defend himself against Fuller's employment discrimination claims.
The "willful and malicious" inquiry creates a high burden for bankruptcy creditors who want to collect on their debts. That language draws from 11 U.S.C. sec. 523(a)(6), which is part of the bankruptcy code. "Willful" under the code is defined as "a deliberate and intentional injury, not merely a deliberate or intentional act that leads to injury." "Malicious" is defined as "wrongful and without just cause or excuse, even in the absence of hatred, spite, or ill-will." Willful and malicious is not an either/or proposition. The creditor has to prove both. A routine negligence case will probably not cut it.
Fuller wins the summary judgment motion on these issues. First, the bankruptcy court finds that her termination was willful under section 523(a)(6) because Rea terminated her employment only hours after she came into work with a name-change order from State Supreme Court. She was now Erin Fuller. Rea said, "now I have a problem with your condition. I have to let you go." The bankruptcy court writes, "Plaintiff's termination was intentionally discriminatory and motivated by unlawful discriminatory animus, the animus here being Defendant's exclaimed and exhibited 'problem with [Plaintiff's] condition.'" Moreover, the SDHR's findings "establish that Defendant was motivated by discriminatory factors and deliberately caused the adverse employment action." In my research into this issue, few cases turned up involving disparate treatment employment discrimination (as opposed to sexual harassment, where malice is more easily inferred) and nondischargeability. Perhaps recognizing that, Judge Morris concludes, "This Court now holds that discriminatory termination is the injury Plaintiff suffered and that a judgment finding a Defendant intentionally caused that injury, particularly when an unlawful discriminatory motive is apparent, is enough to meet the prong of willfulness under section 523(a)(6) of the Bankruptcy Code."
Fuller's termination was also malicious under the bankruptcy code. Of course, as the bankruptcy court noted in the "willful" analysis, when he fired her, Rea told Fuller that he had a problem with her condition. Also, not only did the SDHR find that Fuller was "continuously asked to dress like a man and was told, following her termination, that if she dressed like a man she would be allowed to return to work," but she was terminated on the same day as the name-change order and Rea continued to issue Fuller's paychecks in her male name despite warnings from Fuller's doctor about the potential danger of treating her "as anything other than female." Moreover, the SDHR imposed a civil penalty against the employer, which "act[s] as a persuasive basis for malice implicit in the 'direct and deliberate' discrimination found by the ALJ."
Keeping track of the civil rights opinions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Brought to you by Bergstein & Ullrich.
Tuesday, July 30, 2019
Thursday, July 25, 2019
NYC's driver suspension procedure violates due process
The City of New York has an elaborate process that kicks in when taxicab drivers are arrested. When that happens, their licenses are suspended. The drivers can then request a hearing to have the suspensions lifted. The taxi drivers sued the City under the Due Process Clause, claiming these hearings are a sham. The City loses the case, which provides a good tutorial on how federal due process cases are decided.
The case is Nnebe v. Daus, issued on July 19. These post-suspension hearings are impossible to win (though, in the end, most are able to resume driving their taxi's through a favorable disposition of their criminal cases). The Court (Katzmann, Lynch and Hall) notes that almost no one wins these hearings. Only three drivers out of hundreds of hearings have actually won their hearings, and all three cases were decided by the same ALJ, who was "promptly reprimanded" and "took care not to make another such recommendation for fear that the would be transferred to a less desirable work location." So those three wins were quirks. I guess they were supposed to lose.
The question is whether the post-suspension hearings provide an opportunity for a taxi driver to assert that, even if the criminal charges are true, continued licensure does not pose any safety concerns. Since the drivers do not have that opportunity, the hearings violate due process, in part because no one ever wins them.
The Court first finds that the hearings implicate an important private interest in the taxi drivers earning a living. So they win that prong of the three-part due process analysis under Matthews v. Eldridge (1976), which remains the Supreme Court's seminal procedural due process case. The Cost next examines the risk of erroneous deprivation from the hearings. That's part two of the Matthews test. The Court notes, that once the process exhausts itself, as many as 90 percent of the drivers are back on the road, driving like maniacs again. Since that high number includes drivers whose licenses were initially suspended, the system in place does pose a risk of erroneous deprivations. So the plaintiffs win that prong also, and that makes them two-for-two in the Matthews equation.
The Court turns to the third Matthews prong, which weighs the governmental interest in immediately suspending the licenses upon a driver arrest. "While we take seriously the Government interest implicated [ensuring the safety of the tax-riding public and maintaining the pubic trust in taxi's], we hold that, given the potential of conducting far more meaningful hearings at little or no additional financial or administrative cost to the [Taxi and Limousine Commission], that interest is outweighed by the private interest at stake and the unacceptably high risk of erroneous deprivation."
The case is Nnebe v. Daus, issued on July 19. These post-suspension hearings are impossible to win (though, in the end, most are able to resume driving their taxi's through a favorable disposition of their criminal cases). The Court (Katzmann, Lynch and Hall) notes that almost no one wins these hearings. Only three drivers out of hundreds of hearings have actually won their hearings, and all three cases were decided by the same ALJ, who was "promptly reprimanded" and "took care not to make another such recommendation for fear that the would be transferred to a less desirable work location." So those three wins were quirks. I guess they were supposed to lose.
The question is whether the post-suspension hearings provide an opportunity for a taxi driver to assert that, even if the criminal charges are true, continued licensure does not pose any safety concerns. Since the drivers do not have that opportunity, the hearings violate due process, in part because no one ever wins them.
The Court first finds that the hearings implicate an important private interest in the taxi drivers earning a living. So they win that prong of the three-part due process analysis under Matthews v. Eldridge (1976), which remains the Supreme Court's seminal procedural due process case. The Cost next examines the risk of erroneous deprivation from the hearings. That's part two of the Matthews test. The Court notes, that once the process exhausts itself, as many as 90 percent of the drivers are back on the road, driving like maniacs again. Since that high number includes drivers whose licenses were initially suspended, the system in place does pose a risk of erroneous deprivations. So the plaintiffs win that prong also, and that makes them two-for-two in the Matthews equation.
The Court turns to the third Matthews prong, which weighs the governmental interest in immediately suspending the licenses upon a driver arrest. "While we take seriously the Government interest implicated [ensuring the safety of the tax-riding public and maintaining the pubic trust in taxi's], we hold that, given the potential of conducting far more meaningful hearings at little or no additional financial or administrative cost to the [Taxi and Limousine Commission], that interest is outweighed by the private interest at stake and the unacceptably high risk of erroneous deprivation."
Wednesday, July 24, 2019
"Annoying advertisement" ban in Uber vehicles does not violate First Amendment
The City of New York regulates taxicabs and fore-hire vehicles like Uber. Those regulations sometimes impact the First Amendment. In this case, the city's rules governing commercial speech in this vehicles are under attack. The Court of Appeals says these rules do not violate the First Amendment.
The case is Vugo, Inc. v. City of New York, issued on July 16. The city has banned video advertisements inside for-hire vehicles (FHV) on the basis that "passengers rind in-ride advertisements . . . extremely annoying." But taxicabs (distinct from FHV's) are allowed to have certain advertisements (they call it "Taxi TV") to defray the costs of computer screens and related technology in those vehicles to alert riders to track the progress of their metered fare as the taxi's sit in traffic and the meter continues to rise. The FHV people claim the prohibition against these advertisements in their cars violates the First Amendment.
Commercial advertisements must satisfy constitutional standards, but since these advertisements do not involve political speech, the government enjoys additional leeway in regulating this speech, and the rules cannot be struck down unless they directly advance a substantial governmental interest and the regulation is no more extensive than necessary to sere that interest. We call this the "intermediate scrutiny" test, as opposed to the much more restrictive standards guiding political speech restrictions. After reviewing recent legal developments in this area, the Court of Appeals (Katzmann, Livingston and Droney) concludes that the Supreme Court in Sorrell v. IMS Health, Inc., 564 U.S. 552 (2011), has not altered the intermediate scrutiny standard relevant to these claims, and no Court of Appeals has ruled otherwise.
First things first: the Court says the City has advanced a substantial governmental interest in prohibiting video advertisements in FHV's because the public hates these advertisements. This logic derives from cases holding the government has a substantial interest in regulating community aesthetics and preventing "undue annoyance." This case extends that rationale to video advertisements.
Second, the regulation has a reasonable fit with the interest in avoiding customer annoyance. The FHV lawyers argue the regulation is underinclusive, which even the Court of Appeals says can raise a "red flag." But the government still has authority to regulate matters like this. The City wins this case (and the district court's contrary ruling is overturned) because (1) the Taxi TV exception facilitated the installation of the handy credit card machines in the vehicles and (2) the City had good reason to ban these annoying advertisements. And, by the way, it's not me who obsesses over these annoying advertisements. The Second Circuit ruling repeatedly makes reference to how irritating they are. The fact that taxicabs and not FHV's cannot use these advertisements is not fatal to this regulation, as the FHV's covered by the challenged rules accounted for more than one-third of the daily passenger trips in 2016, including the yellow and green taxis that are not classified as FHV's, the ones that we hail from the street. According to the statistics, that year, riders took 370,000 daily trips in yellow taxis and 213,000 daily trips in Uber and Lyft vehicles. Since that many people were spared these advertisements, that amount is substantial enough to justify the selective regulation.
The case is Vugo, Inc. v. City of New York, issued on July 16. The city has banned video advertisements inside for-hire vehicles (FHV) on the basis that "passengers rind in-ride advertisements . . . extremely annoying." But taxicabs (distinct from FHV's) are allowed to have certain advertisements (they call it "Taxi TV") to defray the costs of computer screens and related technology in those vehicles to alert riders to track the progress of their metered fare as the taxi's sit in traffic and the meter continues to rise. The FHV people claim the prohibition against these advertisements in their cars violates the First Amendment.
Commercial advertisements must satisfy constitutional standards, but since these advertisements do not involve political speech, the government enjoys additional leeway in regulating this speech, and the rules cannot be struck down unless they directly advance a substantial governmental interest and the regulation is no more extensive than necessary to sere that interest. We call this the "intermediate scrutiny" test, as opposed to the much more restrictive standards guiding political speech restrictions. After reviewing recent legal developments in this area, the Court of Appeals (Katzmann, Livingston and Droney) concludes that the Supreme Court in Sorrell v. IMS Health, Inc., 564 U.S. 552 (2011), has not altered the intermediate scrutiny standard relevant to these claims, and no Court of Appeals has ruled otherwise.
First things first: the Court says the City has advanced a substantial governmental interest in prohibiting video advertisements in FHV's because the public hates these advertisements. This logic derives from cases holding the government has a substantial interest in regulating community aesthetics and preventing "undue annoyance." This case extends that rationale to video advertisements.
Second, the regulation has a reasonable fit with the interest in avoiding customer annoyance. The FHV lawyers argue the regulation is underinclusive, which even the Court of Appeals says can raise a "red flag." But the government still has authority to regulate matters like this. The City wins this case (and the district court's contrary ruling is overturned) because (1) the Taxi TV exception facilitated the installation of the handy credit card machines in the vehicles and (2) the City had good reason to ban these annoying advertisements. And, by the way, it's not me who obsesses over these annoying advertisements. The Second Circuit ruling repeatedly makes reference to how irritating they are. The fact that taxicabs and not FHV's cannot use these advertisements is not fatal to this regulation, as the FHV's covered by the challenged rules accounted for more than one-third of the daily passenger trips in 2016, including the yellow and green taxis that are not classified as FHV's, the ones that we hail from the street. According to the statistics, that year, riders took 370,000 daily trips in yellow taxis and 213,000 daily trips in Uber and Lyft vehicles. Since that many people were spared these advertisements, that amount is substantial enough to justify the selective regulation.
Tuesday, July 23, 2019
Title IX claims carry a three-year statute of limitations
This case resolves two issues that I thought was settled long ago: what is the proper forum for educational discrimination claims brought under Title IX of the Civil Rights Act of 1964? And, what is the statute of limitations for educational discrimination claims brought under the Americans with Disabilities Act? The Court of Appeals holds for the first time in a published ruling that a three year statute of limitation applies.
The case is Purcell v. New York Institute of Technology, issued on July 18. The issue arises because plaintiff says the institute discriminated against him as a student. The trial court said the statute of limitations is four months, which is the timeline under Article 78 of the New York CPLR. The Article 78 angle may seem silly, but it is true that you can challenge academic decisions against private colleges under Article 78, which is an expedited legal procedure that asks the court to resolve the dispute on the basis of affidavits and exhibits without live testimony. The drawback for plaintiffs is that, in Article 78's, the colleges get the benefit of the doubt in cases involving academic decisionmaking on the theory that colleges are best suited to address these issues unless they abuse their discretion and issue a crackpot ruling on the academic dispute.
The Court of Appeals (Katzmann, Walker and Cabranes) now holds that federal law is available to resolve these disputes as well, if the students raise federal claims. We all kinda knew this, but sometimes it takes a while for the Court of Appeals to definitively resolve what we all kinda knew all along. Purcell wins on this issue because he is raising a federal claim and not the kind of state law claim that normally arises in an Article 78 proceeding. The Court says, "However strongly New York may feel about the need to defer to academic decision-making, and however justified its decision to funnel all related state claims into Article 78 proceedings may be, New York cannot nullify a federal right or cause of action it believes is inconsistent with its local policies." If at all possible, federal law reigns supreme in our system, however the State of New York feels about it. Since the statute of limitations under Title IX is three years (borrowing from state law personal injury deadlines), Purcell's case is timely and the case returns to the federal trial court.
Along the way, the Court of Appeals resolves an issue that lingered for years without a definitive ruling from this appellate court. In unpublished summary orders, the Second Circuit had held that ADA claims against educational institutions carry a three-year statute of limitations. The Court now solidifies that reasoning in a published ruling. It also reaffirms that the three-year statute of limitations governs Title IX claims.
The case is Purcell v. New York Institute of Technology, issued on July 18. The issue arises because plaintiff says the institute discriminated against him as a student. The trial court said the statute of limitations is four months, which is the timeline under Article 78 of the New York CPLR. The Article 78 angle may seem silly, but it is true that you can challenge academic decisions against private colleges under Article 78, which is an expedited legal procedure that asks the court to resolve the dispute on the basis of affidavits and exhibits without live testimony. The drawback for plaintiffs is that, in Article 78's, the colleges get the benefit of the doubt in cases involving academic decisionmaking on the theory that colleges are best suited to address these issues unless they abuse their discretion and issue a crackpot ruling on the academic dispute.
The Court of Appeals (Katzmann, Walker and Cabranes) now holds that federal law is available to resolve these disputes as well, if the students raise federal claims. We all kinda knew this, but sometimes it takes a while for the Court of Appeals to definitively resolve what we all kinda knew all along. Purcell wins on this issue because he is raising a federal claim and not the kind of state law claim that normally arises in an Article 78 proceeding. The Court says, "However strongly New York may feel about the need to defer to academic decision-making, and however justified its decision to funnel all related state claims into Article 78 proceedings may be, New York cannot nullify a federal right or cause of action it believes is inconsistent with its local policies." If at all possible, federal law reigns supreme in our system, however the State of New York feels about it. Since the statute of limitations under Title IX is three years (borrowing from state law personal injury deadlines), Purcell's case is timely and the case returns to the federal trial court.
Along the way, the Court of Appeals resolves an issue that lingered for years without a definitive ruling from this appellate court. In unpublished summary orders, the Second Circuit had held that ADA claims against educational institutions carry a three-year statute of limitations. The Court now solidifies that reasoning in a published ruling. It also reaffirms that the three-year statute of limitations governs Title IX claims.
Monday, July 22, 2019
The rule of completeness - how it applies in the real world
One way to ensure that your statements are not introduced before a jury out of context is to allow the jury to hear the entire statement. Lawyers like to cherry-pick statements from the opposing party in trying to prove their cases. But if they leave out the rest of the story, the courts will bring in the entire statement. This case shows that the so-called "rule of completeness" has its limits.
The case is United States v. Williams, issued on July 9. I wrote about this case at this link, dealing with the scope of the police department's inventory search which revealed a gun stowed away in a secure compartment of a rental car. The Court held the inventory search did not violate the Fourth Amendment even though it was the second inventory search of the evening. The second search was prompted by defendant's freak-out when he learned the police were going to return the car to the rental people.
A second issue in the appeal involves Williams' claim that the trial court should have allowed the jury to know that he initially denied the gun was his before he eventually 'fessed up. As it happens, Federal Rule of Evidence 106 addresses the rule of completeness, but it only mentions written statements, not oral statements. But the common law applies that rule to oral statements. Why doesn't Rule 106 cover oral statements as well? I have no idea. Maybe the committee that drafted the rule had their eye on the clock and it was almost time to go home for the weekend.
After initially ruling that the rule of completeness allows a party to introduce hearsay evidence to place the one-sided comment in context, the Court of Appeals (Kearse, Livingston and Carney) says the trial court did not abuse its discretion in preventing Williams from introducing his initial denial about the gun ownership before the jury. The rule is that defendant had to "demonstrate that admission of the initial statements denying ownership of the gun was 'necessary to explain' his later statements that the gun was his, to place [these statements] in context, to avoid misleading the jury, or to ensure fair and impartial understanding' of these later statements." The Court says Williams is trying to take the doctrine too far, reasoning:
The case is United States v. Williams, issued on July 9. I wrote about this case at this link, dealing with the scope of the police department's inventory search which revealed a gun stowed away in a secure compartment of a rental car. The Court held the inventory search did not violate the Fourth Amendment even though it was the second inventory search of the evening. The second search was prompted by defendant's freak-out when he learned the police were going to return the car to the rental people.
A second issue in the appeal involves Williams' claim that the trial court should have allowed the jury to know that he initially denied the gun was his before he eventually 'fessed up. As it happens, Federal Rule of Evidence 106 addresses the rule of completeness, but it only mentions written statements, not oral statements. But the common law applies that rule to oral statements. Why doesn't Rule 106 cover oral statements as well? I have no idea. Maybe the committee that drafted the rule had their eye on the clock and it was almost time to go home for the weekend.
After initially ruling that the rule of completeness allows a party to introduce hearsay evidence to place the one-sided comment in context, the Court of Appeals (Kearse, Livingston and Carney) says the trial court did not abuse its discretion in preventing Williams from introducing his initial denial about the gun ownership before the jury. The rule is that defendant had to "demonstrate that admission of the initial statements denying ownership of the gun was 'necessary to explain' his later statements that the gun was his, to place [these statements] in context, to avoid misleading the jury, or to ensure fair and impartial understanding' of these later statements." The Court says Williams is trying to take the doctrine too far, reasoning:
It is not uncommon for a suspect, upon interrogation by the police, to first claim n a self-serving manner that he did not commit a crime, only thereafter to confess that he did. But the rule of completeness does not require the admission of self-serving exculpatory statements in all circumstances, and the mere fact that a suspect denies guilt before admitting it, does not -- without more -- mandate the admission of his self-serving denial. As the district court here aptly pointed out, Williams' confession was 'simply a reversal of his original position."
Thursday, July 18, 2019
Court of Appeals reinstates excessive force verdict
Even experienced judges make mistakes. The Court of Appeals has reinstated a verdict that a longtime Southern District judge vacated. The plaintiff has regained his excessive force verdict against a New York City police officer.
The case is Ortiz v. City of New York, a summary order issued on July 17. Plaintiff testified that he was walking down the street when officer Vazquez attacked him without warning, kicked his knee and sent him face first into the pavement. Plaintiff said the police injured his knee, wrist and back. Of course, the officers told a different story: that Ortiz was slumped against buildings and collapsed on the ground over the course of about 40 minutes, and that since he was intoxicated, they made arrangements for him to be taken to the hospital. This is why we have trials. The jury ultimately ruled in plaintiff's favor against one of the police defendants, Vazquez, awarding him $118,000. The trial court then asked the jury if Vazquez handcuffed the plaintiff after they observed him on the pavement that day. The jury said "yes." The judge next vacated the verdict, concluding that "Ortiz's testimony at trial 'inextricably linked' his claims of unlawful seizure and excessive force, because he testified that 'the altercation between him and Vazquez was so sudden and quick that any unlawful seizure and use of excessive force were simultaneous."
The Court of Appeals (Livingston, Lynch and Sullivan) reverses and reinstates the verdict. The Second Circuit reminds us that the only way the district court can erase a verdict is if there is no evidence whatsoever to support the verdict. The court has to be convinced the plaintiff had nothing, and that the case never should have gone to trial in the first place. The principle here is that the jury may believe only parts of the plaintiff's testimony en route to a plaintiff's verdict. While "the jury does seem to have accepted the officers' account of how, why, and when they handcuffed Ortiz," that does not mean the district court had a basis to find that the jury had rejected all of Ortiz's testimony relating to the excessive force. As the Court of Appeals says:
The case is Ortiz v. City of New York, a summary order issued on July 17. Plaintiff testified that he was walking down the street when officer Vazquez attacked him without warning, kicked his knee and sent him face first into the pavement. Plaintiff said the police injured his knee, wrist and back. Of course, the officers told a different story: that Ortiz was slumped against buildings and collapsed on the ground over the course of about 40 minutes, and that since he was intoxicated, they made arrangements for him to be taken to the hospital. This is why we have trials. The jury ultimately ruled in plaintiff's favor against one of the police defendants, Vazquez, awarding him $118,000. The trial court then asked the jury if Vazquez handcuffed the plaintiff after they observed him on the pavement that day. The jury said "yes." The judge next vacated the verdict, concluding that "Ortiz's testimony at trial 'inextricably linked' his claims of unlawful seizure and excessive force, because he testified that 'the altercation between him and Vazquez was so sudden and quick that any unlawful seizure and use of excessive force were simultaneous."
The Court of Appeals (Livingston, Lynch and Sullivan) reverses and reinstates the verdict. The Second Circuit reminds us that the only way the district court can erase a verdict is if there is no evidence whatsoever to support the verdict. The court has to be convinced the plaintiff had nothing, and that the case never should have gone to trial in the first place. The principle here is that the jury may believe only parts of the plaintiff's testimony en route to a plaintiff's verdict. While "the jury does seem to have accepted the officers' account of how, why, and when they handcuffed Ortiz," that does not mean the district court had a basis to find that the jury had rejected all of Ortiz's testimony relating to the excessive force. As the Court of Appeals says:
The jury may well have disbelieved Ortiz’s testimony that Officer Vazquez attacked Ortiz from behind and drove him to the ground with a kick, or thought that Ortiz was exaggerating in his description of the altercation; nonetheless, the jury may still have credited Ortiz’s testimony that Officer Vazquez kicked him at some point during the encounter.
The jury was entitled to credit some portions of Ortiz’s testimony while disbelieving other portions. The jury could have reasonably regarded the medical evidence Ortiz presented as corroborating his testimony that he was violently kicked—in contrast to his uncorroborated and somewhat implausible account of the genesis of the encounter. As a result, the district court erred in directing judgment for Officer Vazquez on the excessive force claim, because a “reasonable jury” may have had a “legally sufficient evidentiary basis to find for [Ortiz] on that issue.”
Wednesday, July 17, 2019
Second inventory search was legal under the Fourth Amendment
There are a zillion exceptions to the warrant requirement under the Fourth Amendment. In this case, we become acquainted with the rule that police officers may search a vehicle without a warrant provided the search is part of a legitimate "inventory search." This case asks when the police may conduct multiple inventory searches.
The case is United States v. Williams, issued on July 9. Defendant was driving a rental car that was leased in someone else's name. The police pulled him over for reckless driving. When the police brought defendant back to the precinct, they immediately commenced an inventory search of the car. As a general rule, the police are allowed to do this without a warrant. The reasons for an inventory search are (1) "to protect the owner's property while it is in police custody; (2) to protect the police against spurious claims of lost or stolen property; and (3) to protect the police from potential danger." Since these searches do invade the motorist's privacy, the police must conduct inventory searches pursuant to established police procedures. If, in the course of a legitimate inventory search, the police find something illegal, that contraband can be used against the driver in court.
Once the inventory search ended, the police told defendant the car would be returned to the rental agency. This made defendant visibly nervous, and he demanded that the police allow him to make a phone call. Defendant got on the phone and told someone to quickly retrieve the car, and the police noticed his stress level was elevated and he sounded "more stressed." This prompted the police to search the car again. They found a gun hidden in the vehicle, which they retrieved after loosening the screws of a center console that is not normally designed to be opened.
Following his conviction for the illegal gun, defendant tells the Court of Appeals that the second inventory search was illegal and that only the initial inventory search complied with the Fourth Amendment. This is a tricky issue because the second search happened only because defendant got nervous when he realized the car would be returned to the rental place. The Court of Appeals (Livingston, Kearse and Carney) upholds the search. Not only was the second search conducted pursuant to NYPD procedures, but it does not matter that those procedures say nothing about conducting follow-up searches. The Court says these policies do not have to account for every possibility. What is more, the second search made sense because defendant's nervousness about the rental car returning to the agency led the police to think that something of value remained in the car, thereby implicating the very reasons why the police are allowed to undertake inventory searches in the first place. It does not look like the courts have ruled on whether a second inventory search is legal, but the Second Circuit breaks ground in this case on that issue.
The Court of Appeals does not really get into this, but my sense is they worried that someone else would rent the same car the next day and somehow find the gun in the console. While the console was screwed shut as a matter of course (the car was manufactured that way), who the hell knows what would happen if some kiddo with a screwdriver decided to open up the console and found the gun?
The case is United States v. Williams, issued on July 9. Defendant was driving a rental car that was leased in someone else's name. The police pulled him over for reckless driving. When the police brought defendant back to the precinct, they immediately commenced an inventory search of the car. As a general rule, the police are allowed to do this without a warrant. The reasons for an inventory search are (1) "to protect the owner's property while it is in police custody; (2) to protect the police against spurious claims of lost or stolen property; and (3) to protect the police from potential danger." Since these searches do invade the motorist's privacy, the police must conduct inventory searches pursuant to established police procedures. If, in the course of a legitimate inventory search, the police find something illegal, that contraband can be used against the driver in court.
Once the inventory search ended, the police told defendant the car would be returned to the rental agency. This made defendant visibly nervous, and he demanded that the police allow him to make a phone call. Defendant got on the phone and told someone to quickly retrieve the car, and the police noticed his stress level was elevated and he sounded "more stressed." This prompted the police to search the car again. They found a gun hidden in the vehicle, which they retrieved after loosening the screws of a center console that is not normally designed to be opened.
Following his conviction for the illegal gun, defendant tells the Court of Appeals that the second inventory search was illegal and that only the initial inventory search complied with the Fourth Amendment. This is a tricky issue because the second search happened only because defendant got nervous when he realized the car would be returned to the rental place. The Court of Appeals (Livingston, Kearse and Carney) upholds the search. Not only was the second search conducted pursuant to NYPD procedures, but it does not matter that those procedures say nothing about conducting follow-up searches. The Court says these policies do not have to account for every possibility. What is more, the second search made sense because defendant's nervousness about the rental car returning to the agency led the police to think that something of value remained in the car, thereby implicating the very reasons why the police are allowed to undertake inventory searches in the first place. It does not look like the courts have ruled on whether a second inventory search is legal, but the Second Circuit breaks ground in this case on that issue.
The Court of Appeals does not really get into this, but my sense is they worried that someone else would rent the same car the next day and somehow find the gun in the console. While the console was screwed shut as a matter of course (the car was manufactured that way), who the hell knows what would happen if some kiddo with a screwdriver decided to open up the console and found the gun?
Monday, July 15, 2019
Racial harassment claim proceeds against Wal-Mart
The Court of Appeals has issued a summary reversal against Wal-Mart, which allegedly discriminated against a Black-Cuban-American employee whose internal complaints were met with retaliation.
The case is LeGrand v. Wal-Mart Stores East, LP, issued on July 11. This is an appeal from a Rule 12 order, which means there has not been any discovery yet and the court assumes the allegations in the complaint are true before it determines whether the plaintiff asserts a plausible claim for relief. There are three major holdings here: hostile work environment, constructive discharge and retaliation.
1. Plaintiff has a hostile work environment claim because "LeGrand’s supervisor, Karen Alles, and Alles’s supervisor, General Manager Eileen Matranga (both defendants), referred to LeGrand and her mother [Mims] using racial epithets on 'several occasions' in conversations with other co‐workers between February 2013 and August 2014. Mims and LeGrand do not allege hearing Defendants using that language first hand. They allege learning of it from LeGrand’s co‐workers." These allegation are enough to proceed to discovery on the harassment claim. The Court of Appeals (Droney, Jacobs and Leval) says "Comments allegedly made by Alles and Matranga to LeGrand’s co‐workers satisfy each of these elements, even if they were not made in LeGrand’s presence: reasonable people would find an environment to be hostile if supervisors make racist comments about them behind their backs." The Court does not cite case law for the proposition that comments made behind the plaintiff's back can create a hostile work environment, but that principle is firmly rooted in Second Circuit law, for example, Whidbee v. Garzarelli Food Specialties, Inc., 223 F.3d 61 (2d Cir. 2000).
2. Plaintiff also has a constructive discharge claim. This holding is more interesting since most constructive discharge claims fail as the courts do not like it when employees walk off the job. In order to prove constructive discharge, the plaintiff has to show her working conditions were so awful that a rational person would have felt compelled to resign. Easier said than done. I don't think there are more than a dozen published, victorious constructive discharge claims in the Second Circuit over the last 25 years. But plaintiff sufficiently alleges such a claim in this case. The Court says, "Defendants’ racist comments, harassment, and refusals to accommodate her transfer and scheduling requests when similar requests were 'approved without any issues or the same level of scrutiny,' are enough to make LeGrand’s working conditions 'so difficult or unpleasant that a reasonable person in [her] shoes would have felt compelled to resign.'”
3. Finally, plaintiff pleads a retaliation claim. The Second Circuit: "LeGrand (and her mother) lodged several complaints with Walmart’s corporate headquarters about the unlawful treatment alleged in the complaint. LeGrand alleges that the hostile conduct directed against her escalated after the first two complaints and that, around the time LeGrand’s scheduling and transfer requests were denied, Alles told a co‐worker she was retaliating against LeGrand because of these complaints. These facts are all that is required to raise inference of retaliatory conduct sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss."
The case is LeGrand v. Wal-Mart Stores East, LP, issued on July 11. This is an appeal from a Rule 12 order, which means there has not been any discovery yet and the court assumes the allegations in the complaint are true before it determines whether the plaintiff asserts a plausible claim for relief. There are three major holdings here: hostile work environment, constructive discharge and retaliation.
1. Plaintiff has a hostile work environment claim because "LeGrand’s supervisor, Karen Alles, and Alles’s supervisor, General Manager Eileen Matranga (both defendants), referred to LeGrand and her mother [Mims] using racial epithets on 'several occasions' in conversations with other co‐workers between February 2013 and August 2014. Mims and LeGrand do not allege hearing Defendants using that language first hand. They allege learning of it from LeGrand’s co‐workers." These allegation are enough to proceed to discovery on the harassment claim. The Court of Appeals (Droney, Jacobs and Leval) says "Comments allegedly made by Alles and Matranga to LeGrand’s co‐workers satisfy each of these elements, even if they were not made in LeGrand’s presence: reasonable people would find an environment to be hostile if supervisors make racist comments about them behind their backs." The Court does not cite case law for the proposition that comments made behind the plaintiff's back can create a hostile work environment, but that principle is firmly rooted in Second Circuit law, for example, Whidbee v. Garzarelli Food Specialties, Inc., 223 F.3d 61 (2d Cir. 2000).
2. Plaintiff also has a constructive discharge claim. This holding is more interesting since most constructive discharge claims fail as the courts do not like it when employees walk off the job. In order to prove constructive discharge, the plaintiff has to show her working conditions were so awful that a rational person would have felt compelled to resign. Easier said than done. I don't think there are more than a dozen published, victorious constructive discharge claims in the Second Circuit over the last 25 years. But plaintiff sufficiently alleges such a claim in this case. The Court says, "Defendants’ racist comments, harassment, and refusals to accommodate her transfer and scheduling requests when similar requests were 'approved without any issues or the same level of scrutiny,' are enough to make LeGrand’s working conditions 'so difficult or unpleasant that a reasonable person in [her] shoes would have felt compelled to resign.'”
3. Finally, plaintiff pleads a retaliation claim. The Second Circuit: "LeGrand (and her mother) lodged several complaints with Walmart’s corporate headquarters about the unlawful treatment alleged in the complaint. LeGrand alleges that the hostile conduct directed against her escalated after the first two complaints and that, around the time LeGrand’s scheduling and transfer requests were denied, Alles told a co‐worker she was retaliating against LeGrand because of these complaints. These facts are all that is required to raise inference of retaliatory conduct sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss."
Thursday, July 11, 2019
Court of Appeals second-guesses the NLRB in union retaliation claims
When management finds out that someone in the workplace is trying to unionize, they often don't respond well. Which is why we have the National Labor Relations Act. When the union organizer believes the employer is retaliating against him for trying to unionize, he can go to the National Labor Relations Board. If the NLRB rules for the employee, then management can appeal to the Second Circuit, which usually gives the NLRB the benefit of the doubt in these cases. That's not quite what happened here.
The case is Bozzuto's Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board, issued on June 24. Two employees, Greichen and McCarty were trying to start up a union at Bozzuto's, which operates wholesale warehouses in Connecticut. Word got out what these guys were up to. A senior Vice President approached McCarty and asked him "what's going on with this Union stuff?" After management issued a memo to employees that they did not really need a union and that management was looking out for their best interests, Greichen was written up for alleged performance deficiencies and "scary" workplace demeanor. Greichen then got himself fired when he refused to attend a meeting following his comments that management was "screw[ing] the associates." As for McCarty, he continued with the union organizing even after Greichen got canned, and management then accused him of performance deficiencies also, resulting in his termination. McCarty disputed those allegations. After the NLRB ruled in favor these employees, Bozzuto's appealed to the Second Circuit (Kearse, Livingston and Carney), which affirms.
These cases make their way to the Second Circuit at least a few times per year. The Court of Appeals usually defers to the NLRB's judgment in these matters (but not always, as demonstrated by this case), reiterating that it is illegal to retaliate against workers for their union activity. A few longstanding rules arise in this case. First, while management is allowed to speak with employees about the union organizing, it cannot threaten the employees over it. As for McCarty, the employer actually did not break the law when it asked about the "Union stuff." After taking apart the evidence on this issue, the Second Circuit finds this inquiry was not a coercive gesture but instead a passing question. This case is probably the definitive Second Circuit ruling on how to interpret managerial inquiries like this. That's good for management in general, but the employer in this case is not out of the woods, as the Court of Appeals goes on to find that McCarty's termination was retaliatory and therefore unlawful.
Greichen's termination, however, was legal. While the employee did not attend the meeting despite management's request, the evidence does not support the NLRB's finding that the meeting was set up as a pretext to go after Greichen. Rather, this employee was insubordinate in not showing up at the meeting. Like the analysis relating to McCarty, the analysis guiding Greichen's case is involved and a good example of the Court of Appeals digging into the record to ensure the NLRB is doing its job properly.
The case is Bozzuto's Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board, issued on June 24. Two employees, Greichen and McCarty were trying to start up a union at Bozzuto's, which operates wholesale warehouses in Connecticut. Word got out what these guys were up to. A senior Vice President approached McCarty and asked him "what's going on with this Union stuff?" After management issued a memo to employees that they did not really need a union and that management was looking out for their best interests, Greichen was written up for alleged performance deficiencies and "scary" workplace demeanor. Greichen then got himself fired when he refused to attend a meeting following his comments that management was "screw[ing] the associates." As for McCarty, he continued with the union organizing even after Greichen got canned, and management then accused him of performance deficiencies also, resulting in his termination. McCarty disputed those allegations. After the NLRB ruled in favor these employees, Bozzuto's appealed to the Second Circuit (Kearse, Livingston and Carney), which affirms.
These cases make their way to the Second Circuit at least a few times per year. The Court of Appeals usually defers to the NLRB's judgment in these matters (but not always, as demonstrated by this case), reiterating that it is illegal to retaliate against workers for their union activity. A few longstanding rules arise in this case. First, while management is allowed to speak with employees about the union organizing, it cannot threaten the employees over it. As for McCarty, the employer actually did not break the law when it asked about the "Union stuff." After taking apart the evidence on this issue, the Second Circuit finds this inquiry was not a coercive gesture but instead a passing question. This case is probably the definitive Second Circuit ruling on how to interpret managerial inquiries like this. That's good for management in general, but the employer in this case is not out of the woods, as the Court of Appeals goes on to find that McCarty's termination was retaliatory and therefore unlawful.
Greichen's termination, however, was legal. While the employee did not attend the meeting despite management's request, the evidence does not support the NLRB's finding that the meeting was set up as a pretext to go after Greichen. Rather, this employee was insubordinate in not showing up at the meeting. Like the analysis relating to McCarty, the analysis guiding Greichen's case is involved and a good example of the Court of Appeals digging into the record to ensure the NLRB is doing its job properly.
Tuesday, July 9, 2019
Court says Trump violated the First Amendment in blocking Twitter dissenters
A businessman with no political experience was elected to public office a few years ago. He was a different kind of politician, one who zig-zagged on policy and overruled his advisors without telling them in advance. He also began utilizing social media to communicate directly with the public, triggering controversy with off-hand comments that sometimes contained spelling and grammatical errors. This social media platform allowed his constituents to talk back. Some constituents were not fans of his, so he cut them off and blocked them, shutting them out of the public debate.
The man I'm talking about is the president of the United States, and the social media platform is Twitter. There was a time when a presidential press conference was a big deal, even a bigger deal when the president consented to an interview by a serious journalist who could ask real questions. We are not seeing these press conferences anymore. They used to be the only game in town. Richard Nixon never had Twitter at his disposal. Neither did Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton. Twitter does not offer much, but the public can talk back directly to any politician with a Twitter account. So what happens when the president blocks people from seeing his tweets?
The case is Knight First Amendment Institute v. Donald J. Trump, issued on July 9. The facts are not complex. Trump conceded in this litigation that he blocked some Twitter followers because he did not like what they had to say. The Court of Appeals (Parker, Hall and Droney) says this constituted viewpoint discrimination in violation of the First Amendment. While Trump's lawyers argued that his Twitter account was not a public forum but, instead, a private outlet which Trump started before he wandered into the White House, the Court of Appeals disagrees, as his current Twitter thing is largely devoted to discussing public policy and prominently states that Trump is the 45th President of the United States. What started out as a private forum is now public. As Judge Parker writes, the current Twitter account is a "channel for communicating and interacting with the public about his administration.” And, "The public presentation of the Account and the webpage associated with ii bear all the trappings of an official, state‐run account." Believe it or not, the National Archives regards Trump's tweets as official government records.
Having squared that away, the Court of Appeals next determines whether the Twitter account is a public forum. The forum analysis is usually tricky, as not all speech on government property or even government speech creates a public forum that would prohibit viewpoint discrimination under the First Amendment. The analysis here is not complex. The Second Circuit finds the Twitter account is in fact a public forum, which places strong restrictions on how the government may restrict speech in connection with that forum. As the Court says, "Opening an instrumentality of communication for indiscriminate use by the general public creates a public forum. The Account was intentionally opened for public discussion when the President, upon assuming office, repeatedly used the Account as an official vehicle for governance and made its interactive features accessible to the public without limitation. We hold that this conduct created a public forum."
As I said, viewpoint discrimination is prohibited in a public forum. The Court holds that Trump committed a First Amendment violation in blocking his critics. The panel summarizes its reasoning this way:
The man I'm talking about is the president of the United States, and the social media platform is Twitter. There was a time when a presidential press conference was a big deal, even a bigger deal when the president consented to an interview by a serious journalist who could ask real questions. We are not seeing these press conferences anymore. They used to be the only game in town. Richard Nixon never had Twitter at his disposal. Neither did Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton. Twitter does not offer much, but the public can talk back directly to any politician with a Twitter account. So what happens when the president blocks people from seeing his tweets?
The case is Knight First Amendment Institute v. Donald J. Trump, issued on July 9. The facts are not complex. Trump conceded in this litigation that he blocked some Twitter followers because he did not like what they had to say. The Court of Appeals (Parker, Hall and Droney) says this constituted viewpoint discrimination in violation of the First Amendment. While Trump's lawyers argued that his Twitter account was not a public forum but, instead, a private outlet which Trump started before he wandered into the White House, the Court of Appeals disagrees, as his current Twitter thing is largely devoted to discussing public policy and prominently states that Trump is the 45th President of the United States. What started out as a private forum is now public. As Judge Parker writes, the current Twitter account is a "channel for communicating and interacting with the public about his administration.” And, "The public presentation of the Account and the webpage associated with ii bear all the trappings of an official, state‐run account." Believe it or not, the National Archives regards Trump's tweets as official government records.
Having squared that away, the Court of Appeals next determines whether the Twitter account is a public forum. The forum analysis is usually tricky, as not all speech on government property or even government speech creates a public forum that would prohibit viewpoint discrimination under the First Amendment. The analysis here is not complex. The Second Circuit finds the Twitter account is in fact a public forum, which places strong restrictions on how the government may restrict speech in connection with that forum. As the Court says, "Opening an instrumentality of communication for indiscriminate use by the general public creates a public forum. The Account was intentionally opened for public discussion when the President, upon assuming office, repeatedly used the Account as an official vehicle for governance and made its interactive features accessible to the public without limitation. We hold that this conduct created a public forum."
As I said, viewpoint discrimination is prohibited in a public forum. The Court holds that Trump committed a First Amendment violation in blocking his critics. The panel summarizes its reasoning this way:
the speech restrictions at issue burden the Individual Plaintiffs’ ability to converse on Twitter with others who may be speaking to or about the President. President Trump is only one of thousands of recipients of the messages the Individual Plaintiffs seek to communicate. While he is certainly not required to listen, once he opens up the interactive features of his account to the public at large he is not entitled to censor selected users because they express views with which he disagrees.Finally, the Court of Appeals rejects Trump's arguments that his Twitter account is really government speech which does not require dissenting responses. There is such a speech classification, such as when the government makes an official pronouncement. But that is not this case, as the Twitter account actually involves comments and feedback from thousands of members of the public. This is also a tricky area of First Amendment speech. But it provides Trump with no defense. As the Court writes:
Considering the interactive features, the speech in question is that of multiple individuals, not just the President or that of the government. When a Twitter user posts a reply to one of the President’s tweets, the message is identified as coming from that user, not from the President. There is no record evidence, and the government does not argue, that the President has attempted to exercise any control over the messages of others, except to the extent he has blocked some persons expressing viewpoints he finds distasteful. The contents of retweets, replies, likes, and mentions are controlled by the user who generates them and not by the President, except to the extent he attempts to do so by blocking. Accordingly, while the President’s tweets can accurately be described as government speech, the retweets, replies, and likes of other users in response to his tweets are not government speech under any formulation. The Supreme Court has described the government speech doctrine as “susceptible to dangerous misuse.” It has urged “great caution” to prevent the government from “silenc[ing] or muffl[ing] the expression of disfavored viewpoints” under the guise of the government speech doctrine. Extension of the doctrine in the way urged by President Trump would produce precisely this result.This is a highly-political case only because the defendant is a controversial president. I seriously doubt the judges on this case are Trump fans, and they know what the rest of us know: the president's Twitter feed is something else. The Court, however, wraps up its analysis with a gentle reminder that in today's rough-and-tumble speech environment, the way to deal with disfavored speech (including those of presidential critics) is not suppressing that speech but allowing it. "In resolving this appeal, we remind the litigants and the public that if the First Amendment means anything, it means that the best response to disfavored speech on matters of public concern is more speech, not less."
Discrimination claim is preempted by federal labor law
This woman sued her former employer, a Long Island hospital, and her labor union after she was fired for allegedly falling asleep on the job. She claimed her termination constituted disability discrimination because she has sleep apnea, which can cause excessive somnolence. She also claimed the union did not fight for her. The case is dismissed on preemption grounds, as the district court found, and the Court of Appeals agrees, that the case is preempted by the Labor Management Relations Act, a federal statute. The claim is also untimely under that statute.
The case is Whitehurst v. 1199 SEUI United Healthcare Workers East, issued on June 28. Plaintiff brought her claims in state court alleging disability discrimination under state and New York City law. The Union removed the case to federal court, and the district court denied plaintiff's request to send it back to state court, as she was really asserting a duty of fair representation" claim under the LMRA. The federal court also said the claim against the hospital arose under federal law. In the end, the EDNY dismissed the complaint as untimely under federal law. I presume the state law claims that plaintiff tried to assert were timely.
Off to the Court of Appeals (Hall, Sack and Droney), which agrees with the district court. Certain claims simply cannot be brought in state court, and LMRA claims are among them. That means claims like this are subject to "complete preemption." Under that statute, suits for violation of contracts between and employe and a labor organization may only be filed in federal court provided the industry affects interstate commerce, which covers most industries, including Wickerd's farm (two points if you know what that even refers to). Where, as here, the claim actually implies rights created by the union contract, the state law claim must either be treated as an LMRA claim or be dismissed as preempted by federal labor-contract law. The Supreme Court said that in Allis-Chalmers Corp. v. Lueck, 471 U.S. 202 (1985). So, while plaintiff thought she was bringing a legitimate state law claim in state court, she actually only had an untimely federal claim that could only be heard in federal court.
The problem with plaintiff's claim against the hospital is that a court cannot adjudicate that claim without first deciding whether she had a right to avail herself of the grievance process, which in turn requires an interpretation of the union contract. Since the contract is the source of the rights plaintiff seeks to vindicate, her claim is intertwined with that contract and is therefore preempted by the LMRA. We have a similar analysis with respect to her claims against the union. Any claim against the union implicates the collective bargaining agreement, as she claims the union denied her proper representation by failing to pursue arbitration. All of this is tied up in the union contract. And, I am sure a major bummer for Whitehurst, who loses her claim based on a technicality that only lawyers and judges will ever understand.
The case is Whitehurst v. 1199 SEUI United Healthcare Workers East, issued on June 28. Plaintiff brought her claims in state court alleging disability discrimination under state and New York City law. The Union removed the case to federal court, and the district court denied plaintiff's request to send it back to state court, as she was really asserting a duty of fair representation" claim under the LMRA. The federal court also said the claim against the hospital arose under federal law. In the end, the EDNY dismissed the complaint as untimely under federal law. I presume the state law claims that plaintiff tried to assert were timely.
Off to the Court of Appeals (Hall, Sack and Droney), which agrees with the district court. Certain claims simply cannot be brought in state court, and LMRA claims are among them. That means claims like this are subject to "complete preemption." Under that statute, suits for violation of contracts between and employe and a labor organization may only be filed in federal court provided the industry affects interstate commerce, which covers most industries, including Wickerd's farm (two points if you know what that even refers to). Where, as here, the claim actually implies rights created by the union contract, the state law claim must either be treated as an LMRA claim or be dismissed as preempted by federal labor-contract law. The Supreme Court said that in Allis-Chalmers Corp. v. Lueck, 471 U.S. 202 (1985). So, while plaintiff thought she was bringing a legitimate state law claim in state court, she actually only had an untimely federal claim that could only be heard in federal court.
The problem with plaintiff's claim against the hospital is that a court cannot adjudicate that claim without first deciding whether she had a right to avail herself of the grievance process, which in turn requires an interpretation of the union contract. Since the contract is the source of the rights plaintiff seeks to vindicate, her claim is intertwined with that contract and is therefore preempted by the LMRA. We have a similar analysis with respect to her claims against the union. Any claim against the union implicates the collective bargaining agreement, as she claims the union denied her proper representation by failing to pursue arbitration. All of this is tied up in the union contract. And, I am sure a major bummer for Whitehurst, who loses her claim based on a technicality that only lawyers and judges will ever understand.
Monday, July 8, 2019
"Diet" Coke is not misleading under New York law
This year alone, the Second Circuit has issued three decisions rejecting false advertising claims relating to soda pop, including this case. This time around, the Court for the first time issues a published opinion that says Diet Coke does not mislead its customers through use of the word of "diet."
The case is Geffner v. The Coca-Cola Company, issued on June 27. The claim is that calling it "diet" Coke is misleading because it does not promise weight-loss. The Second Circuit notes that it has issued two summary orders this year on this issue involving Dr. Pepper and Pepsi. It now puts this issue to rest in a published opinion.
The Court (Cabranes, Raggi and Droney) starts off by swiftly rejecting any claims that the use of attractive models for Diet Coke advertising is misleading. The Court note that this sort of propaganda is ubiquitous in the advertising world such that it cannot reasonable be understood to "convey any specific meaning at all." The Court adds that the statement that Diet Coke will "not go to your waist" is vague and non-specific and really amounts to inactionable puffery. In other words, the advertising campaign is loaded with the meaningless language and imagery intended to sell as much of this chemical shitstorm as possible.
Turning to the main event, calling it "diet" Coke is not misleading. That label refers to the drink's low caloric content, and "it does not convey a more general weight loss promise." At oral argument on this appeal, the plaintiffs' lawyer insisted that research proves that Diet Coke actually causes you to gain weight. That argument is not referenced in this opinion. Rather, the point here is that calling it a "diet" product is legal since it "connotes simply that the 'diet' version of the drink is lower in calories than the 'non-diet' version of the drink."
Friday, July 5, 2019
Court offers guidance on filing documents under seal
The Second Circuit has provided guidance on when it is appropriate for district courts to seal sensitive litigation material. It does so in the context of highly-publicized sexual misconduct allegations involving some well-known individuals, including Alan Dershowitz.
The case is Brown v. Maxwell, issued on July 2. The procedural history is complex. In 2008, financier Jeffrey Epstein pleaded guilty to sexual misconduct charges. Two of his victims sued the government seeking to nullify the plea agreement, claiming the government failed to inform and consult with them in the process leading up to the plea deal. Meanwhile, other victims (including Virginia Giuffre) petitioned the court to join that case, advancing new allegations against other prominent individuals, including Dershowitz,who worked on Epstein's legal defense. Dershowitz moved to intervene, successfully striking the allegations against him as immaterial, scandalous, et al. What next happened was that Giuffre sued Ghislaine Maxwell, who was among the notables accused of sexual misconduct. In the Giuffre case, the SDNY allowed the parties control over which documents to file under seal. Maxwell and Guiffre next settled their case after they briefed the summary judgment motion that Maxwell filed. The entire summary judgment motion was filed under seal. Dershowitz next petitioned the court to unseal that motion to demonstrate that Giuffre made up the allegations against him. The district court denied the motion to unseal the material.
The Court of Appeals (Cabranes, Pooler and Droney) resolves the appeal this way:
1. As for the summary judgment materials, the law presumes they are filed openly and not under seal, and that the court must arrive at specific and on-the-record findings that a narrowly-tailored sealing is necessary to preserve higher values. That did not happen here. The fact that the court denied the motion for summary judgment in the Maxwell case does not mean the materials may be kept under seal. The district court also failed to review the documents individually and make a particularized finding that the documents must remain under seal "to preserve higher values." The Court of Appeals decides to simply order that the summary judgment documents be unsealed for all the world to see.
2. As for the remaining sealed material, the Court of Appeals notes the presumption that judicial records should be open to all. Documents relating to motions to quash trial subpoenae and to exclude certain deposition testimony are therefore entitled to the public access presumption, as the public has the right to know how judges are resolving issues. In other words, documents related to judicial decision-making are usually available to all. But it is not clear why the district court kept these documents under seal. This issue returns to the district court to properly determine what documents may remain under seal.
The Second Circuit offers some commentary on all of this, as it shares the district court's concern that court files may be used to "promote scandal arising out of unproven potentially libelous statements." We know that anyone can say anything against anyone, even under oath. The Court notes that judges may issue protective orders forbidding dissemination of certain material to protect people from unfair embarrassment, etc. Trial judges may also note on the record that certain accusations lack credibility. And, there's always sanctions for lawyers and parties who abuse the process. The Court of Appeals also offers "a cautionary note" stating that materials submitted to a court may or not be true, and "do not reflect the court's own findings." This is all the more problematic because few people are actually prosecuted for perjury even when they file false affidavits. Also, court filings are susceptible to fraud, and you really can't sue someone for defamation for statements made in a court proceeding. The Court emphasizes that the media "does the public a profound disservice when it reports on parties' allegations uncritically." The Court concludes, "we therefore urge the media to exercise restraint in covering potentially defamatory allegations, and we caution the public to read such accounts with discernment." When the media or the public reads this cautionary tale or follows the Court's advise is another story.
The case is Brown v. Maxwell, issued on July 2. The procedural history is complex. In 2008, financier Jeffrey Epstein pleaded guilty to sexual misconduct charges. Two of his victims sued the government seeking to nullify the plea agreement, claiming the government failed to inform and consult with them in the process leading up to the plea deal. Meanwhile, other victims (including Virginia Giuffre) petitioned the court to join that case, advancing new allegations against other prominent individuals, including Dershowitz,who worked on Epstein's legal defense. Dershowitz moved to intervene, successfully striking the allegations against him as immaterial, scandalous, et al. What next happened was that Giuffre sued Ghislaine Maxwell, who was among the notables accused of sexual misconduct. In the Giuffre case, the SDNY allowed the parties control over which documents to file under seal. Maxwell and Guiffre next settled their case after they briefed the summary judgment motion that Maxwell filed. The entire summary judgment motion was filed under seal. Dershowitz next petitioned the court to unseal that motion to demonstrate that Giuffre made up the allegations against him. The district court denied the motion to unseal the material.
The Court of Appeals (Cabranes, Pooler and Droney) resolves the appeal this way:
1. As for the summary judgment materials, the law presumes they are filed openly and not under seal, and that the court must arrive at specific and on-the-record findings that a narrowly-tailored sealing is necessary to preserve higher values. That did not happen here. The fact that the court denied the motion for summary judgment in the Maxwell case does not mean the materials may be kept under seal. The district court also failed to review the documents individually and make a particularized finding that the documents must remain under seal "to preserve higher values." The Court of Appeals decides to simply order that the summary judgment documents be unsealed for all the world to see.
2. As for the remaining sealed material, the Court of Appeals notes the presumption that judicial records should be open to all. Documents relating to motions to quash trial subpoenae and to exclude certain deposition testimony are therefore entitled to the public access presumption, as the public has the right to know how judges are resolving issues. In other words, documents related to judicial decision-making are usually available to all. But it is not clear why the district court kept these documents under seal. This issue returns to the district court to properly determine what documents may remain under seal.
The Second Circuit offers some commentary on all of this, as it shares the district court's concern that court files may be used to "promote scandal arising out of unproven potentially libelous statements." We know that anyone can say anything against anyone, even under oath. The Court notes that judges may issue protective orders forbidding dissemination of certain material to protect people from unfair embarrassment, etc. Trial judges may also note on the record that certain accusations lack credibility. And, there's always sanctions for lawyers and parties who abuse the process. The Court of Appeals also offers "a cautionary note" stating that materials submitted to a court may or not be true, and "do not reflect the court's own findings." This is all the more problematic because few people are actually prosecuted for perjury even when they file false affidavits. Also, court filings are susceptible to fraud, and you really can't sue someone for defamation for statements made in a court proceeding. The Court emphasizes that the media "does the public a profound disservice when it reports on parties' allegations uncritically." The Court concludes, "we therefore urge the media to exercise restraint in covering potentially defamatory allegations, and we caution the public to read such accounts with discernment." When the media or the public reads this cautionary tale or follows the Court's advise is another story.