Thursday, November 20, 2014

EMPLOYMENT LAW QUARTERLY | Fall 2014, Volume XVI, Issue iii

Download PDF

Tidal Wave: More Systemic Cases on the Horizon

By Stephen S. Zashin*

The Cleveland Field Office of the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) recently welcomed a new Director. Sworn in on October 6, 2014, Cheryl Mabry-Thomas now presides over the EEOC’s Cleveland Field Office, which is part of the Agency’s Philadelphia District. The Director’s responsibilities include management of the office’s staff and activities.

Ms. Mabry-Thomas has worked for the EEOC for nearly three decades, including many years investigating systemic claims. The EEOC investigates charges of discrimination on an individual and systemic basis. The EEOC defines systemic discrimination broadly as “a pattern or practice, policy, or class case where the alleged discrimination has a broad impact on an industry, profession, company or geographic area.” Given Ms. Mabry-Thomas’ background and the EEOC’s recent activity, employers should expect to see more systemic charges coming out of the Cleveland Field Office.

In recent years, the EEOC has increased its systemic enforcement efforts. The EEOC can make a greater impact with systemic cases involving many employees, as compared to cases involving only a single employee. In 2005, the EEOC established a special task force regarding systemic discrimination. While the vast majority of the charges of discrimination the EEOC receives are for single individuals, the EEOC can turn a charge of discrimination by a single individual into a systemic investigation. As part of its systemic enforcement efforts, the EEOC has targeted recruitment and training programs that may have discriminating barriers of entry, age discrimination in reductions in force, and compliance with client or customer wishes that result in the discriminatory placement or hiring of employees.

The EEOC also targets company policies that are “uniformly applied” but do not accommodate an individual or that have a broad impact on a protected class of employees. For example, hiring or promotion policies that unintentionally, but routinely, exclude certain groups, such as through criminal background checks, are ripe for systemic investigation by the EEOC. Employers should review their company policies and revise any that may have this result when applied.

*Stephen S. Zashin, an OSBA Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment law and the head of the firm’s Labor and Employment Groups, has extensive experience counseling employers on class or collective actions, including systemic charges brought by the EEOC. For more information about the EEOC’s enforcement strategies or your labor and employment law needs, please contact Stephen (ssz@zrlaw.com) at 216.696.4441.



What’s Next? EEOC Files Its First Ever Lawsuits Based on Transgendered Status

By Drew C. Piersall*

On September 25, 2014, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) sued two employers alleging sex discrimination on the basis of transgendered status. According to the EEOC, each employer violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by firing an employee because “[she] is transgendered, because of [her] transition from male to female, and/or because [she] did not conform to the . . . employer’s sex or gender-based preferences, expectations, or stereotypes.” These “gender stereotyping” lawsuits likely signify a shift in the EEOC’s enforcement efforts concerning an individual’s transgendered status.

In each case, the employer discharged the employee after the employee announced her transgendered status or began presenting as a woman. In one, the employer discharged the employee approximately four months after she began wearing feminine attire. See EEOC v. Lakeland Eye Clinic, P.A., No. 8:14-cv-02421 (M.D. Fla. filed Sept. 25, 2014). The EEOC alleged co-workers ignored the employee and made derogatory comments and that the employer confronted the employee about her changing appearance. The employer also allegedly told the employee it was eliminating her position but then hired a replacement approximately a month later. In the second case, the employee allegedly informed her employer via letter of her plans to undergo a gender transition. See EEOC v. R.G. & G.R. Harris Funeral Homes, Inc., No. 2:14-cv-13710 (S.D. Mich. filed Sept. 25, 2014). The EEOC alleged that less than one month later the employer’s owner stated the employee’s plan to undergo a gender transition was unacceptable and fired the employee. In both cases, the EEOC seeks injunctive and monetary relief.

These cases are not anomalies or outliers. Rather, in its most-recent Strategic Enforcement Plan, the EEOC identified “coverage of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals under Title VII’s sex discrimination provisions” as a top enforcement priority. In addition, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, which covers Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and Tennessee, previously held that a transgendered individual presented a valid Title VII discrimination claim. See Smith v. City of Salem, 378 F.3d 566 (6th Cir. 2004). The U.S. Office of Special Counsel recently reached a similar conclusion. On August 28, 2014, the Office of Special Counsel found the Army discriminated against an employee based on gender identity following the employee’s announced transition from male to female. The Office of Special Counsel analogized the situation to Title VII claims.

Given the EEOC’s increased emphasis on protecting transgendered employees, employers must be cognizant of the protections Title VII and related state laws afford transgendered employees and should update their company handbooks and policies accordingly.

*Drew C. Piersall, a member of the firm’s Columbus office, practices in all areas of labor and employment law. If you have questions about the impact of transgendered issues on your workplace, please contact Drew (dcp@zrlaw.com) at 614.224.4411.



The FLSA’s Professional Exemption Requires a Degree

By Michele L. Jakubs*

The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio recently shot down a restaurant’s effort to classify several chefs as “learned professionals” under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”). See Solis v. Suroc, Inc., 2014 U.S. Dist LEXIS 127929. The Department of Labor sued the owners of several Ohio restaurants for failing to pay minimum wage and overtime to certain chef employees. Generally, the FLSA requires employers to pay non-exempt employees minimum wage and, for hours worked in excess of 40 hours in a work week, overtime wages.

The restaurant claimed that the chefs, referred to as #2 and #3 chefs, fell within the FLSA’s exemptions for professionals and executives. Codified as 29 U.S.C. § 213, the FLSA provides several exemptions from its minimum wage and overtime wage requirements, including “any employee employed in a bona fide executive, administrative, or professional capacity.” The Code of Federal Regulations further defines the exemptions for professionals in 29 C.F.R. § 541.301 and for executive employees in 29 C.F.R. § 541.100.

To fall within the professional exemption, an employee must: (1) “perform work requiring advanced knowledge;” (2) the work must be in a field of science or learning; and (3) customarily, the employee must have acquired the advanced knowledge through a “prolonged course of specialized intellectual instruction.” The regulations specify that a degree is prima facie evidence that an employee has met the third requirement.

In applying these three factors, the court determined that the restaurant failed to prove that the #2 and #3 chefs fell within the professional exemption because their respective job descriptions did not require any degree or formal culinary education. Further, the court found that the chefs’ extensive on-the-job training was insufficient to meet the regulation’s requirement of a prolonged course of specialized intellectual instruction. The court noted that the restaurant offered no evidence supporting its argument that the chefs received instruction by using the restaurant as a school-type setting during off-hours.

The regulation specifies that the professional exemption does not apply to occupations in which most employees acquire their skill through experience rather than advanced, specialized intellectual instruction. The court refused to extend the exemption to positions requiring extensive work experience, but no degree, like with the #2 and #3 chefs. The court continued that for the professional exemption to apply, the employee must begin the job in possession of the advanced knowledge customarily acquired through a prolonged course in specialized instruction. Generally, training the employee after hire is insufficient.

The restaurant also argued that the #3 chefs fell within the executive employee exemption, as defined in 29 C.F.R. § 541.100. In order to fall within the executive employee exemption, an employee must: (1) be compensated on a salary basis of no less than $455 per week; (2) have the primary duty of managing the enterprise or a department or subdivision of the enterprise; (3) “customarily and regularly” direct the work of two or more employees; and (4) have the authority to hire and fire other employees, or make suggestions regarding hiring, firing, and promotion that “are given particular weight.” The court analyzed only the fourth requirement, finding that the #3 chefs did not meet the exemption as they had no authority to hire and fire other workers, and there was no evidence that the #3 chefs made suggestions or recommendations regarding hiring, firing, or promotion decisions.

As this case demonstrates, determining whether an employee meets the requirements for exemption from minimum wage and overtime under the FLSA is fact intensive. Improperly applying an exemption can prove costly for employers, and when in doubt, employers should contact counsel.

*Michele L. Jakubs, an OSBA Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment Law, practices in all areas of labor and employment law. For more information on the FLSA’s wage and hour requirements or exemptions, please contact Michele (mlj@zrlaw.com) at 216.696.4441.



Will Supervisors Soon Be Off the Hook in Employment Discrimination Cases?

By Sarah K. Ott*

Recently, the Ohio Supreme Court issued a game-changing decision concerning whether supervisors can be held liable alongside employers in employment discrimination cases. The case, Hauser v. City of Dayton Police Dep’t., 140 Ohio St. 3d 266, 2014-Ohio-3636, involved a female police officer who claimed that the Dayton Police Department and her supervisor treated her unfavorably as compared to her male peers. The officer named both the Dayton Police Department and her direct supervisor as defendants. The court did not rule on the merits of Hauser’s discrimination claim; instead, it only addressed the narrow question of whether Ohio law expressly imposes liability on employees of political subdivisions in employment discrimination cases.

Ohio Revised Code § 2744.03 grants employees of political subdivisions (such as police departments and other government employers) immunity from tort liability, unless another section of the Ohio Revised Code expressly imposes liability. The court’s analysis focused on whether R.C. § 4112.02(A), which prohibits employer discrimination, expressly imposes liability. Ohio Revised Code § 4112.01(A)(2) defines “employer” as “the state, any political subdivision of the state, any person employing four or more persons within the state, and any person acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer” (emphasis added). The Ohio Supreme Court previously interpreted the bolded phrase to include employees as among those liable for employment discrimination (the seminal case being Genaro v. Cent. Transp., 84 Ohio St.3d 293, 703 N.E.2d 782 (1999)).

In Hauser, the Ohio Supreme Court found that Ohio law does not permit individual liability of a supervisor of a political subdivision in a discrimination case brought under R.C. § 4112.02(A). In reaching its decision, the court followed two lines of reasoning. First, it found that in the historical context in which the General Assembly drafted R.C. Chapter 4112, the theory of respondeat superior governed. Respondeat superior refers to the general rule that an employer is responsible for its employees’ acts performed in the course of the employees’ job; that is, an employer is vicariously liable for the acts of an employee. Under the same theory of vicarious liability, federal courts decline to hold individual employees liable under Title VII. As such, the court reasoned that it is contrary to the theory of respondeat superior to impose liability on an individual employee.

Second, the court reasoned that imposing liability on individual employees contradicts the general context and purpose of R.C. § 4112.02(A). The court noted that it makes little sense to hold supervisors liable when R.C. § 4112.02(A) exempts employers with fewer than four employees from discrimination liability. Furthermore, the court observed that the statute expressly provides for individual liability elsewhere. Ohio Revised Code § 4112.02(J) holds individuals liable for aiding and abetting the discriminatory practices of an employer, but this section is arguably superfluous if R.C. § 4112.02(A) requires individual liability. Ohio Revised Code § 4112.02(J) demonstrates that when the General Assembly intends to impose individual liability on employees, it does so expressly rather than by implication.

So what does this mean for employers today? It means that supervisors in political subdivisions are not personally liable in employment discrimination cases brought under R.C. § 4112.02(A). This decision also may be a harbinger of future rulings similarly finding that private sector employees are likewise immune from liability for employment discrimination. While the Hauser Court refused to overrule Genaro, its decision calls into question the holding in Genaro and suggests the Ohio Supreme Court may be willing to revisit whether supervisors of private employers are subject to employment discrimination liability under R.C. § 4112.02(A). Also, do not be surprised if savvy plaintiff’s attorneys start bringing more aiding and abetting claims under R.C. § 4112.02(J).

*Sarah K. Ott practices in all areas of labor and employment law. For more information about the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision in Hauser and its consequences, please contact Sarah (sko@zrlaw.com) at 216.696.4441.



Public Sector Alert: How To Conduct Yourself Under the Open Meetings Act

By Jonathan J. Downes*

The Second District Court of Appeals came down hard on an Ohio public body for violating Ohio’s Open Meetings Act. Maddox v. Greene Cty. Children Servs. Bd. of Dirs., 2014-Ohio-2312. Over the course of a year, the public body entered into executive session during numerous public meetings to discuss an employee’s job performance and employment status. After the public body discharged the employee, the employee challenged the discharge. The employee claimed the public body violated Ohio’s Open Meetings Act by holding private meetings to discuss the employee’s performance and job status. The court agreed with many of the former employee’s claims. The decision provides a great reminder as to how public bodies must conduct themselves and highlights the following important sections of Ohio’s Open Meetings Act:

1. When entering an executive session, public bodies must specifically cite the appropriate statutory exception for conducting a meeting outside the public’s purview.

When holding meetings, courts construe the Open Meetings Act liberally in favor of taking action and conducting deliberations in meetings open to the public. Public officials may convene private executive sessions to discuss sensitive information, but when doing so must follow certain procedures. Specifically, public officials only may conduct executive sessions for one of the reasons detailed in Ohio Revised Code Section 121.22(G) and must state the reason during the public meeting. The Maddox Board went into executive session to discuss the following: 1) an employee’s evaluation; 2) “upcoming negotiations;” and 3) “personnel matters” or “personnel issues.” In each instance, the Maddox Board failed to sufficiently specify the executive session’s purpose during the public meeting.

Public bodies may discuss an employee’s job performance in an executive session, but before doing so, must identify a R.C. § 121.22(G) purpose. In Maddox, the Board went into executive session to discuss the “Executive Director’s Evaluation.” The Open Meetings Act does not specifically include evaluating a public employee as an exception to the open meeting requirement. However, the court considered a previous decision where a public body discussed an employee’s job performance when considering that employee’s dismissal. Ohio Revised Code Section 121.22(G) authorizes executive sessions to consider the dismissal of public employees. Since the Open Meetings Act does not include an exception for evaluating public employees, a public body must link each executive session regarding an employee’s job performance to an exception enunciated in R.C. § 121.22(G).

In fact, public bodies should always reference a specific R.C. § 121.22(G) exception. At different points, the Maddox Board entered executive session to discuss “upcoming negotiations” and “personnel matters” or “personnel issues.” Relying on case law, the court concluded these non-specific references were not proper statutory purposes and did not satisfy R.C. § 121.22(G). Instead, the Maddox Court found that “the statute requires [the body] to be more specific by denoting the precise type of ‘personnel’ matters it would address, such as hiring, discipline, termination, etc.” Therefore, whenever a public body wishes to enter executive session, it should specifically reference a R.C. § 121.22(G) exception.

2. After concluding an executive session, public bodies must re-open the meeting to the public and move to adjourn the meeting prior to concluding business.

After an executive session ends, the public body must reopen the meeting to the public and make a motion and vote to adjourn the public meeting. The Maddox Board regularly ended the executive sessions without reopening the meeting to the public, which the court found violated the Open Meetings Act. Instead, the Maddox Board should have given those present a reasonable opportunity to re-enter the room after the executive session ended, before officially concluding business. Public bodies that enter an executive session should always re-convene the public meeting before adjourning that meeting.

3. When public bodies make decisions based on improper deliberations, they must hold subsequent deliberations sufficient to support the decision prior to taking formal action.

Ohio Revised Code Section 121.22(H) invalidates formal actions based on deliberations held in closed meetings that do not comply with one of the executive session exceptions detailed in R.C. § 121.22(G). The Maddox Board terminated an Executive Director after holding a proper executive session. However, the court concluded the Maddox Board based its termination decision on previous deliberations held during improper executive sessions. In response, the Maddox Board pointed to additional discussions held in the proper executive session. However, it was not enough “to point to some ‘new’ or ‘additional’ deliberations if the employment action” still resulted from improper deliberations. Therefore, the Maddox Board had to re-deliberate in either a public session or a properly held executive session. In particular, those subsequent discussions had to be sufficient “to support a finding that [the Board’s] discharge decision did not result from prior improper deliberations.” Any time a public body suspects previous deliberations or actions were improper, the public body should hold subsequent substantive deliberations prior to taking formal action.

These principles serve as an excellent reminder of how public bodies must conduct themselves in light of Ohio’s Open Meetings Act.

*Jonathan J. Downes, an OSBA Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment Law, has extensive experience advising public entities and employers. For more information about the application of the Open Meetings Act to executive sessions, please contact Jonathan (jjd@zrlaw.com) at 614.224.4411.



Ohio’s Minimum Wage to Increase to $8.10

By David P. Frantz*

On January 1, 2015, pursuant to a 2006 Amendment to the Ohio Constitution, which provides for an annual minimum wage increase tied to the rate of inflation, Ohio’s minimum wage will increase fifteen cents for non-tipped employees to $8.10 per hour. The state minimum wage for tipped employees will increase seven cents to $4.05 per hour. The increase will apply to all Ohio employees, age sixteen and older, employed by businesses with annual gross receipts of more than $297,000.

Ohio employees of businesses with annual gross receipts below $297,000 and fourteen- and fifteen-year-old employees are only entitled to receive hourly wages equivalent to the federal minimum wage. The federal minimum wage currently stands at $7.25 per hour for non-tipped employees and $2.13 per hour for tipped employees and is not subject to an automatic annual increase.

*David P. Frantz practices in all areas of labor and employment law. For more information about minimum wage changes or your labor and employment law needs, please contact David (dpf@zrlaw.com) at 216.696.4441.



Z&R SHORTS


Best Lawyers®

Z&R is happy to announce the following Z&R Labor and Employment Group lawyers have been selected for inclusion in Best Lawyers in America 2015:

  • George S. Crisci – Employment Law Management, Labor Law – Management, and Litigation – Labor and Employment
  • Jon M. Dileno – Employment Law – Management
  • Jonathan J. Downes – Employment Law – Management and Labor Law – Management
  • Stephen S. Zashin – Labor Law – Management

Zashin & Rich is pleased to announce the return of Jason Rossiter

Jason Rossiter has returned to Zashin & Rich after a short stint out on the west coast. Jason, who first began working at Zashin & Rich in 2007, has been practicing law for nearly 15 years. He has a wealth of experience drafting contracts, advising employers on compliance with workplace employment, privacy, and technology laws, and representing employers in employment-related litigation.


Zashin & Rich Proudly Launches New Website

After several months of development, we proudly launched on November 10, 2014. Many thanks to Unity Design for capturing our energy and corporate culture in our re-branding and website. zrlaw.com


Upcoming Speaking Engagements

Friday, December 19, 2014, at 1:45pm
Drew C. Piersall is presenting "Individual vs. Official Capacity and the Ex Parte Young Doctrine" at 1:45 p.m. for the Ohio Department of Public Safety's inaugural "Defending §1983 Actions Against Public Clients" at the Department's headquarters located in Columbus, Ohio.

Monday, February 2, 2015, beginning at 3:30pm
Jonathan J. Downes presents "Virtual Realities: Dealing with Arbitration, Arbitration Decisions, and Mid-Term Bargaining" at OHPERLA 31st Annual Training Conference beginning at 3:30 p.m. at the Roberts Centre in Wilmington, Ohio.

Tuesday, February 3, 2015, beginning at 10:30am
Drew C. Piersall presents "'Modern Family' Employment: Today's Discrimination Trends" at OHPERLA 31st Annual Training Conference beginning at 10:30 a.m. at the Roberts Centre in Wilmington, Ohio.

Thursday, February 12, 2015, at 2:00pm
Patrick J. Hoban presents "Affordable Care Act" at 2:00 p.m. for the American Payroll Association, Greater Cleveland Chapter at the Crown Plaza in Independence, Ohio.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Not So Fast: State Agency Ordered to Apply Correct Standard in Determining Employment Status

By Scott Coghlan*

Recently, the Tenth District Court of Appeals ordered the Administrator of the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation (BWC) to set aside a BWC determination that certain cable installers were employees. Zashin & Rich attorney Scott Coghlan argued the BWC abused its discretion by applying a statutory test for construction contracts in deciding whether the cable installers were independent contractors or employees. The Tenth District agreed, ordering the BWC to vacate its finding based upon the BWC’s faulty analysis.

Following a 2009 audit, the BWC reclassified cable installers providing services for an Ohio corporation as employees instead of independent contractors, resulting in an alleged six-figure underpayment of workers’ compensation premiums. After the corporation protested and appealed this determination, the BWC ultimately upheld the auditor’s finding, relying upon a statutory test for determining independent contractor status in construction contracts. The corporation moved for a writ of mandamus (a court order compelling a government entity to act), which a magistrate for the Tenth District recommended granting. The BWC’s Administrator objected to the magistrate’s decision, and the case proceeded to the Tenth District for independent review.

To obtain a writ of mandamus, the party seeking the writ must show: (1) a clear legal right to the relief sought; (2) the opposing party’s clear legal duty to perform the act requested; and (3) a lack of a plain and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of the law. A clear legal right to relief exists in cases where the BWC abuses its discretion by entering an order not supported by “some evidence.”

The Tenth District’s decision focused on whether the BWC used the appropriate test in finding the cable installers were the corporation’s employees. In its analysis, the BWC relied upon R.C. 4123.01(A)(1)(c), which sets forth a 20-factor test for determining independent contractor status pursuant to a “construction contract.” A construction contract is one that involves construction-related activities performed upon a building, structure, highway, or bridge. As the cable installers did not perform work pursuant to a construction contract, the Tenth District held that the R.C. 4123.01(A)(1)(c) test was inapplicable.

Next, the Tenth District found the BWC based its determination upon the R.C. 4123.01(A)(1)(c) test instead of the appropriate common-law test. The common-law test for independent contractor status focuses on the central question of “who had the right to control the manner or means of doing the work?” Under this test, the decision maker can give unequal weight to the facts relevant to the inquiry of who has the right to control. In contrast, the statutory construction contract test relies on a mathematical formula giving equal weight to the statutory factors.

Based upon the BWC’s improper application of the 20-factor construction contract test instead of the common-law test, the Tenth District upheld and adopted the magistrate’s decision, finding the BWC abused its discretion. Although the Tenth District refrained from making a determination as to the cable installers’ independent contractor status under the appropriate common-law test, the court ordered the BWC’s Administrator to vacate and set aside its prior determination and issue a new order that is supported by the evidence and applies the correct independent contractor test.

This case demonstrates the complexity surrounding independent-contractor status. The Tenth District’s decision is important for businesses and employers as it rejected the BWC’s attempt to expand the 20-factor test set forth in R.C. 4123.01(A)(1)(c) beyond the context of construction contracts. By rejecting this attempt and reinforcing the applicability of the common-law test, this decision provides clarity to businesses and employers as to the appropriate analysis for independent contractor status and acts as valuable precedent for overturning employee status determinations based upon faulty analysis.

Scott Coghlan successfully argued for a writ of mandamus in this case. For more information about this decision, independent contractor status, or workers’ compensation law, please contact Scott | sc@zrlaw.com | 216.696.4441

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

ACA Tax Credit Eligibility/Employer Mandate Fines Headed to the U.S. Supreme Court Ahead of Schedule - Employer ACA Liability Hangs in the Balance

By Patrick J. Hoban*

On July 25, 2014, Zashin & Rich Co., L.P.A. (“Z&R”) notified employers about the two conflicting opinions issued by federal courts of appeals over whether the IRS may grant tax credits to individuals who reside in states with Affordable Care Act (“ACA”) health care Exchanges established and operated by the federal government. See Halbig v. Burwell, No. 14-5018 (D.C. Cir. Jul. 22, 2014) (“Halbig”), King v. Burwell, No. 14-1158 (4th Cir. Jul. 22, 2014) (“King”).

The Halbig decision held that individuals who obtained health insurance through federal Exchanges were not eligible for tax credits under the ACA. However, the D.C. Circuit vacated Halbig on September 4, 2014, after the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the U.S. Justice Department, and the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) sought and were granted en banc review. At that point, there was no circuit split on the ACA tax credit issue as the Fourth Circuit in King upheld the IRS rule granting tax credits to individuals who obtained health insurance through federal Exchanges. However, the plaintiffs in King appealed the Fourth Circuit decision to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In the absence of a circuit split, many observers concluded that the Supreme Court would bide its time and await the decision of the full D.C. Circuit in Halbig. However, true to the unusual judicial and legislative events that have surrounded the ACA since its enactment in 2010, four justices of the Supreme Court granted review in King on November 7, 2014. This development renders the pending D.C. Circuit en banc decision in Halbig less significant as the issue will be addressed directly by the Supreme Court. It is expected that the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments this spring and render a decision by the end of June 2015.

As Z&R explained in its July Alert, the stakes for the ACA and employers’ liability under the Employer Mandate could not be higher. If the Supreme Court reverses King and strikes down the IRS rule, it will in effect render the Employer Mandate a nullity in the 34 states (including Ohio) which did not elect to establish “state operated” Exchanges. This is because employer fines under the Employer Mandate are conditioned upon full-time employees obtaining health insurance coverage through an Exchange and receiving tax credits to pay for that coverage under the ACA.

It is estimated that approximately 85% of individuals who obtained health insurance coverage through state and federally operated Exchanges in 2014 received some level of tax credit. In addition to disrupting the application of ACA Employer Mandate fines in states without state operated Exchanges, if the Supreme Court strikes down the IRS rule, it will significantly disrupt the application of individual taxes under the ACA’s Individual Mandate. Furthermore, such an outcome will pressure states that elected not to establish Exchanges to act to maintain existing ACA tax credit eligibility for their citizens.

In short, uncertainty will continue to surround the ACA’s Employer Mandate for some months. While a Supreme Court ruling on the “make-or-break” tax credit eligibility issue will clarify some questions, it is just as likely to generate more of the confusion that has characterized the ACA since 2010. As it has since the ACA was first introduced in 2009, Z&R will track ACA developments and provide regular updates and guidance to employers so they can successfully navigate the ACA maze.

Patrick J. Hoban, an OSBA Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment Law, practices in all areas of private and public sector labor relations. For more information about the ACA or labor & employment law, please contact Pat | pjh@zrlaw.com | 216.696.4441

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

NLRB Goes “All In” on D.R. Horton - Class Action Waivers in Arbitration Agreements Unlawful, No Matter What 40 Federal Courts Say

By Stephen S. Zashin*

The National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB” or the “Board”) continued its dogged commitment to its own supremacy in any matter relating to employment and strenuously reaffirmed its decision in D.R. Horton, 357 NLRB No. 184 (2012). In Murphy Oil USA, Inc., 361 NLRB No. 72 (October 28, 2012), the NLRB rejected the reasoning of dozens of federal courts and two dissenting Board members to hold once again that class action waivers in employment arbitration agreements violate Section 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”). The NLRB again held that Section 7 of the NLRA protects any collective action related to terms and conditions of employment, including pursuit of class action employment litigation or class arbitration. The NLRB insisted that its now routine decisions invalidating arbitration agreements do not conflict with the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”) or the well-established national policy favoring arbitration.

In Murphy Oil, the employer, operator of a chain of fueling stations in twenty-one states, required all employees to sign an arbitration agreement that included a waiver of the right to a jury trial relating to all employment-related disputes and the right to participate in a class or collective action in an employment-related dispute. Instead, employees were required to agree, as a condition of employment, to individually arbitrate almost all employment related claims.

An employee who signed the agreement filed a class action lawsuit in federal court along with several other employees alleging violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act. Murphy Oil relied on the arbitration agreement to stay the class action proceedings and the court issued an order to enforce the arbitration agreement – requiring the employees to arbitrate individually their claims.

During the federal court litigation, the employee also filed an unfair labor practice charge (“ULP”) alleging that arbitration agreement violated the NLRA by restricting employee rights to file charges with the NLRB and by requiring employees to waive class litigation and agree to individual arbitration. Soon after the ULP was filed, Murphy Oil revised the agreement to state that it did not restrict an employee’s right to engage in protected, concerted activity, under the NLRA.

Murphy Oil and the NLRB General Counsel agreed to transfer the case directly to the NLRB for hearing instead of presenting it to an NLRB Administrative Law Judge. In the end, a three-member majority of the NLRB defiantly re-affirmed its holding in D.R. Horton and held that:

  • Murphy Oil’s mandatory arbitration agreement violated the NLRA because it led employees to believe they could not file NLRB charges (even with Murphy Oil’s revisions to the agreement that expressly stated employees could do so);
  • Murphy Oil’s mandatory arbitration agreement violated the NLRA by requiring a waiver of class litigation rights; and
  • Murphy Oil violated the NLRA by enforcing the arbitration agreement’s class litigation waiver in federal court (even though the court granted Murphy Oil’s motion and enforced the arbitration agreement).

In reaching its decision, the NLRB clung steadfastly to its decision in D.R. Horton, vigorously insisting that the pursuit of any “collective” actions relating to employment conditions were “substantive” rights protected under Section 7’s general language. Not only did the three-member NLRB majority aggressively reaffirm D.R. Horton, but it also rejected several federal court decisions rejecting the D.R. Horton “doctrine,” including the Fifth Circuit’s lengthy analysis and decision in D.R. Horton, Inc. v. NLRB, 737 F.3d 244 (5th Cir. 2013).

Specifically, the NLRB majority summarily dismissed the Fifth Circuit’s contrary conclusion that while collective action may fall within Section 7’s protections, the FAA and national policy favoring arbitration as expressed through numerous, recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions, rendered arbitration class litigation waivers lawful.

Based on its holding, the NLRB majority ordered Murphy Oil to:

  • Cease and desist from maintaining the mandatory arbitration agreement;
  • Rescind the mandatory arbitration agreement or revise it to exclude the class litigation waiver and notify all current and former employees and applicants of the rescission;
  • Notify the federal district court that enforced the mandatory arbitration agreement that it has rescinded the agreement and that Murphy Oil will engage in class litigation of the claims; and
  • Pay the class plaintiffs’ attorney fees for defending Murphy Oil’s motion to enforce the mandatory arbitration agreement’s terms.

The NLRB’s two remaining members filed stern dissents. Member Miscimarra opposed the majority on grounds that Section 7’s protection does not encompass the pursuit of class action litigation or arbitration and that, moreover, the U.S. Congress did not grant the NLRB authority to dictate how courts and other federal agencies adjudicated non-NLRB claims. Additionally, he pointed to Section 9(a) of the NLRA and concluded that the statute itself granted employees the right to “individually” resolve their grievances – which is exactly what the arbitration agreement did – and noted that, in accord with dozens of federal court decisions, the FAA rendered class waivers lawful. Finally, Member Miscimarra rejected the majority’s conclusion that it had the authority to order an employer to pay claimants’ attorneys’ fees for defending a lawful motion which a federal court granted.

Member Johnson’s dissent was more pointed and stated at the outset that:

[w]ith this decision, the majority effectively ignores the opinions of nearly 40 Federal and State courts that, directly or indirectly, all recognized the flaws in the Board’s use of a strained, tautological reading of the National Labor Relations Act in order to both override the Federal Arbitration Act and ignore the commands of other Federal statutes. Instead, the majority chooses to double down on a mistake that, by now, is blatantly apparent.

As member Johnson’s dissent notes, there are currently 37 cases pending before the NLRB arising from the application of D.R. Horton’s controversial holding. Based on the three-member majority’s insistence that its expansive reading of the NLRA trumps all other federal statutes and decisional law, the battle will undoubtedly be fought to the U.S. Supreme Court. Notably, the NLRB did not appeal the Fifth Circuit Court’s rejection of D.R. Horton to the Supreme Court last year and, thus, continues to strike down employment arbitration agreements in other regions of the country.

Until the Supreme Court weighs in on D.R. Horton, employers with mandatory arbitration agreements must consider the benefits of including class litigation waivers as against the NLRB majority’s crusade to strike down any arbitration agreements containing them. As we have since D.R. Horton was first decided, Zashin & Rich will continue to track developments and provide updates to employers.

Stephen S. Zashin, an OSBA Certified Specialist in Labor and Employment Law, appears before the National Labor Relations Board and practices in all areas of labor relations. For more information about D.R. Horton or any other labor or employment matter, please contact Stephen | ssz@zrlaw.com | 216.696.4441