The Court of Appeals has reinstated an employment discrimination lawsuit because, although the defendants moved for summary judgment under Rule 56, the trial court instead dismissed the case under the rules guiding a motion to dismiss under Rule 12.
The case is Miller v. LaManna, issued on March 9. Plaintiff was a correction officer working in the New York prison system. He claims he was treated differently because he is Black, at least compared with while officers who were not afforded similar mistreatment for engaging in comparable misconduct. Plaintiff also claims he suffered retaliation for filing a charge of discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
At the close of extensive discovery, the state moved for summary judgment, arguing the evidence generated in discovery proves the plaintiff did not suffer any racial discrimination or retaliation. The summary judgment record was approximately 1,700 pages. But the state also said the complaint that initiated this lawsuit did not state a claim for discrimination. That is the sort of argument defendants normally make at the start of the case, not when discovery is completed. Yet, the district court, rather than resolving the case under summary judgment standards -- determining if the evidence might support a verdict in the plaintiff's favor -- instead determined whether the complaint states a plausible claim; under that inquiry we do not examine any documents beyond the complaint itself. Under the Rule 12 process, the district court said plaintiff has not stated a plausible claim.
The district court abused its discretion, holds the Court of Appeals (Lynch and Menashi), which notes that shortly after the district court dismissed this case under Rule 12, the Court of Appeals held in Lugo v. City of Troy, 114 F.4th 80 (2d Cir. 2024), that the district court cannot resolve a motion to dismiss on standing grounds simply by reading the complaint if there is also a summary judgment record that might support the plaintiff's claims. While Lugo held as such in a standing case, its reasoning applies to this case, the Second Circuit holds, over Judge Sullivan's dissent. Quoting from Lugo, the Second Circuit states that "the administration of justice is best served when the district court applies the standards that are appropriate for the pertinent motion and stage of litigation." Since the stage of litigation when defendants in this case was post-discovery, the proper procedure was summary judgment, not a motion to dismiss. The "Rule 12(d) conversion" in this case an abuse of discretion.
The case returns to the district court to determine if the summary judgment record demonstrates that plaintiff is entitled to a trial on his discrimination and retaliation claims.