Employment Discrimination Litigation Made Simple
A.
Discrimination Claims Can Be Brought under Both
Federal and California Law.
There are a
number of different laws that protect employees
from discrimination. The two most frequently
utilized in California are the Fair Employment
and Housing Act (FEHA) (Government Code sections
12900 - 12996) and Title 7 of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. sections 2000e -
2000e-17).
There are also a
number of Federal and State statutes
specifically prohibiting employment
discrimination. Employees can frequently choose
whether to proceed under California or Federal
law; however, there are different rights, rules
and remedies under California law versus Federal
law.
B. Who
Is Protected Under California Discrimination
Law.
Except in cases
of harassment, an employee must work for an
employer who regularly employees five or more
people to be entitled to protection under
California discrimination law.
However, a
harassment claim can be brought against an
employer who employs only one person or
regularly receives the services of at least one
independent contractor.
Further, when
somebody is retaliated against because he or she
complains about discrimination, the retaliation
claim can be brought against any employer.
All public
employers, such as cities and counties, are
subject to discrimination claims.
Under California
FEHA law, non-profit religious organizations are
not subject to discrimination claims, but they
may be subject to liability under the California
Constitution.
C.
Definition of an Employee.
Under California
law (FEHA) an employee is considered anyone
under the direction and control of an “employer”
regardless of whether the employment
relationship was based on an oral or written
contract. Independent contractors may fall
outside of the definition of “employee” for
discrimination claims but not for harassment
claims. Thus, generally speaking, harassment
claims have a broader sweep and cover more
potential workers.
D. The
Requirement of Bringing an Administrative Claim.
Before pursuing
a civil suit for harassment or discrimination
under California law, a plaintiff must first
exhaust his or her administrative remedies by
filing a complaint with the Department of Fair
Employment and Housing (DFEH) or with the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC).
It is important
that the complaint specifically identify the
discrimination and the perpetrators of the
discrimination, or it may limit the remedies
sought and people who can be sued in a civil
case.
If an employee
files with the Department of Fair Employment and
Housing, he or she can ask the agency to not
investigate the claim but, rather, simply
immediately request a right-to-sue letter.
It is very
simple for an employee to contact the DFEH or
EEOC and file a claim, although generally it is
best to do so with the help of an attorney who
specializes in harassment and discrimination
cases.
E.
Statute of Limitations.
Generally
speaking, a plaintiff must file a complaint with
the Department of Fair Employment and Housing or
the EEOC within one year of the discrimination. A plaintiff must file a claim with one
of the governing entities before filing a
lawsuit.
If the
discrimination has occurred over a long period of
time, the plaintiff can sometimes rely on the
continuing violation doctrine. Under this
doctrine, if it is found to apply, the sexual
harassment complaint is timely if any of the
discriminatory practices continues into the
one-year limitations period.
F. What
Types of Discrimination Are Prohibited.
Not every form
of discrimination is prohibited by law. Under
California law, the following forms of
discrimination are prohibited: race, religion,
disability, age, sex (including sexual
harassment), national original and marital
status.
If an employee
is discriminated against for any other reason,
there may not be a case.
G. What
Is the Standard for Discrimination.
Although
Federal and California law differ slightly,
discrimination claims fall into four broad
categories:
►
individual “disparate treatment” cases,
in which the employee must prove that the
employer intentionally treated him or her
less favorably than other employees because
of race, religion, age, sex, etc.;
►
retaliation cases, in which the
plaintiff must prove that the employer
intentionally retaliated against him or her
for opposing discrimination or engaging in
protected activities;
►
disparate impact or adverse impact cases,
in which the plaintiff must show that the
employer’s otherwise innocuous employment
practice has an unfavorable impact on a
protected class and is not justified by any
claimed business necessity;
►
cases involving class-wide pattern or
practice or systemic disparate treatment
cases, in which the plaintiff must
prove a pattern or practice of intentional
discrimination against a protected class,
usually by showing a statistical difference
between protected class members and
similarly qualified members of the majority
group, as well as evidence of individual
instances of discrimination.
H. What
Evidence of Discrimination Is Required.
The law
recognizes that plaintiffs rarely have access to
direct evidence of intentional discrimination so
that in most cases, a plaintiff is allowed to
introduce indirect or circumstantial evidence of
discrimination.
I. What
the Plaintiff Must Prove.
To prevail in a
“disparate treatment” case, the plaintiff must
first prove that he or she is a member of a
protected class, and that the employer
intentionally discriminated against the
plaintiff, most often by treating the plaintiff
differently from the way the employer treated
people not in the protected class. Generally,
the plaintiff must prove the disparate treatment
by indirect evidence such as establishing that
members of a certain gender, race or older workers (over
40 under California law) are singled out for
demotions or termination.
Thus, as is most
often the case, when the plaintiff’s
disparate treatment case depends on
circumstantial or indirect evidence, then the
plaintiff must first prove the following:
► that the
employee is a member of a protected class;
► that the
employee was qualified for his or her
position; and
► that the
employee was discharged.
If plaintiff can
prove all of this, then the court will presume
that intentional discrimination has occurred.
However, that
does not mean the plaintiff automatically wins.
The employer then has an opportunity to rebut or
counter the presumption of discrimination by
stating a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason
for terminating the plaintiff or taking any
other adverse employment action.
If the employee
can show that the reason stated by the employer
for the termination or adverse employment action
was not the true reason, but a pretext for
discrimination, then the plaintiff will win the
case. The plaintiff must prove to the judge or
jury that the employer’s explanation is not
worthy of belief and also that the employer’s
action was, at least in part, discriminatory.
J.
Proving Retaliatory Discrimination.
In a case in
which the plaintiff is claiming he or she was
retaliated against for complaining of
discrimination or engaging in other protected
activity, in the absence of direct evidence, the
plaintiff must show that he or she suffered an
adverse employment action and that there is a
connection between the protected activity, such
as complaining about discrimination or opposing
discrimination, and the adverse employment
action.
Again, the
employer has the opportunity to demonstrate that
there was non-retaliatory explanation for the
employment action and the plaintiff must, once
again, show that the explanation is pretextual
(i.e., fake).
K.
Harassment Cases.
Sexual, racial,
religious and other forms of harassment are
actually considered, under the law, to be
discrimination. In cases of harassment, the
employee does not have to go through the more
difficult standard of proof required in
disparate impact discrimination cases. To
prevail on a harassment claim, a plaintiff need
only establish that the harassing conduct was
unwelcome, severe and pervasive and interfered
with the employee’s working condition.
L.
Recoverable Damages for Discrimination Cases.
If an employee
sues under California law, he or she is entitled
to recover damages for past and future medical
and psychiatric expenses, past and future wage
loss, damages for emotional distress and
punitive damages.
In a
discrimination case, a plaintiff does not need
to undergo psychiatric or psychological
treatment in order to recover damage for
emotional distress.
To
recover punitive damages, i.e., damages to
punish the defendant employer, a plaintiff must
prove:
► that the
employer hired or retained the
discriminating individual with knowledge of
his or her unfitness for the position and in
conscious disregard of other’s rights for
safety;
► authorized
or ratified the wrongful conduct; or
► was
personally guilty of oppression, fraud or
malice.
If the employer
is a corporation, its knowledge, conscious
disregard, authorization or act of oppression,
fraud or malice must be on the part of a
corporate officer, director or managing agent. A
managing agent is a person who exercises
substantial independent authority and judgment
over decisions that ultimately determine
corporate policy.
A
plaintiff can prove that an employer’s
ratification for purposes of liability for
punitive damage by establishing:
► the
employer adopted or approved of the action
of the discriminator;
► it can be
inferred from the employer’s failure, after
being informed of the discrimination, that
it ratified the conduct of the discriminator
by such evidence as a failure to fully
investigate and punish the discriminator.
M. Claim
for Loss of Consortium.
A plaintiff’s
spouse can also sue and recover damages for
‘loss of consortium.” A spouse is allowed to
recover damages for the loss of society, comfort
and care that result from the injured spouse’s
unavailability due to their injury and having to
watch the plaintiff suffer. In order to recover
these damages, a spouse must be named as a party
to the lawsuit and must have been married to the
plaintiff at the time of the injury.
There are
advantages and disadvantages to filing a loss of
consortium claim that should be discussed with
an attorney before filing.
N.
Punitive Damages.
Under California
law, if a plaintiff can prove that the conduct
of the wrongdoer was fraudulent, malicious or
despicable, he or she is entitled to recover
punitive damages which are intended to punish
the wrongdoer and provide an example for the
rest of society. The focus of this type of case
is generally on the wrongdoing of the defendant
as opposed to the injury to the plaintiff. The
amount of punitive damage will vary depending
upon the heinousness of the defendant’s
misconduct and its economic status. The law
recognizes that large companies have to pay more
money in punitive damages to be adequately
punished than small companies or individuals. In
motor vehicle cases, punitive damages are most
frequently awarded against drunk drivers.
O.
Recovery for Attorneys Fees.
If the plaintiff
can prove discrimination, he or she is entitled
to recover his or her attorneys fees as an
element of damages. This is a very important
aspect of the law because frequently the award
for attorneys fees will be greater than the
actual damage award to the employee. California
law allows recovery for attorneys fees greater
than the amount of actual damages because it
recognizes that it important that attorneys have
an incentive to handle sexual harassment and
discrimination cases and that legitimate victims
of harassment and discrimination would be unable
to seek legal redress if attorneys fees were not
awarded on top of a damage award.
P. Key
Factors in Employment Discrimination Cases.
Like almost any
case, the most important factor for a plaintiff
in an employment discrimination case to prevail
is the credibility of the plaintiff employee. If
the case goes to trial and a jury does not
believe the employee, the plaintiff will
generally lose regardless of the rest of the
evidence. Further, if the defendant employer can
prove that the employee has lied, either before
or during the litigation, even a good case can
be destroyed because jurors do not want to award
money to somebody they believe is lying and
manipulating the system.
Although
derogatory, discriminatory remarks are not
necessary to win an employment discrimination
case, they are very, very helpful. If the
plaintiff can establish through other witnesses
that such remarks were made by supervisors or
management in a company aimed at plaintiff or
aimed at people of plaintiff’s protected class
(people of the same race, national origin,
gender, age range, etc.) it will provide
powerful evidence that the company has a
hostile, discriminatory environment.
It is also
helpful to a plaintiff’s case if more than one
member of their protected class joins the
lawsuit or has made complaints to HR and
management about discriminatory misconduct.
It is normally
harmful to a plaintiff’s case if similarly
situated members of the plaintiff’s protected
class testify that the company is fair and
non-discriminatory. This will normally create an
inference that plaintiff is either a
troublemaker or was treated negatively for poor
performance or reasons other than
discrimination. One of the most important
concepts of employment law is that, in order to
prevail in a discrimination case, the plaintiff
must prove that they were treated poorly because
of their race, age, gender, etc., and not
because a supervisor or another employee had it
in for plaintiff or simply did not like the
plaintiff or treated the plaintiff worse than
other employees. That is not discrimination
under the law.
Finally, in
cases in which a plaintiff is alleging that the
company systematically discriminates against
people in the plaintiff’s protected class
through hiring, paying, promoting, demoting or
firing, it is, of course, very helpful if
statistical evidence within the company verifies
the plaintiff’s claim and the company cannot
provide a reasonable explanation for why members
of plaintiff’s class are treated differently
than members of other classes. For instance, if
a company can prove that the reason why there
are no women in higher management is because
very few women ever apply for jobs within the
company and that the same percentage of women
rise in the company as men even though there are
many more men in higher management, the company
will generally be able to prevail in an
employment discrimination case.
Q.
Settlement of Employment Discrimination Cases.
Employment
discrimination cases are generally difficult to
settle because they are complex, difficult to
prove and difficult to evaluate. Attempting to
ascertain what jurors have done in other similar
cases, which is the yardstick by which most
cases settle, is not particularly fruitful in
employment discrimination cases because there is
such a wide variance in verdicts from millions
of dollars to small recoveries to defendants
prevailing.
Thus, generally
speaking, the case must be settled on a risk
analysis. Based on the evidence that is
available at the time that settlement is
considered, the defendant has to consider its
risk of a potential multimillion dollar verdict
if plaintiff can establish a punitive damage
point while the plaintiff must consider the risk
of a very small verdict or losing if the jury
fails to find punitive damages or finds no
discrimination.
An important
settlement factor in plaintiff’s favor in an
employment discrimination case is that if the
plaintiff can prove discrimination, they will be
awarded their attorneys fees which, by the time
the case comes to trial, will almost always be
hundreds of thousands of dollars and sometimes
millions of dollars. Thus, in an employment
discrimination case, even if the defense
believes there is a significant risk that they
will lose, they must consider paying a
significant amount of money in settlement even
if they believe the plaintiff is not
particularly injured because a low verdict can
still result in a very large attorney fee award.