Archive for 2006

A License To Complain

Last Thursday, the Supreme Court ruled that a worker alleging retaliation for complaining about discrimination may sue even if she has not suffered a tangible loss, like a firing or denial of a promotion. In its decision in Burlington Northern v. White, the Supreme Court ruled that under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, “retaliation” includes any act that “well might have dissuaded a reasonable worker” worker from complaining. The court upheld a $43,500 judgment in favor of an employee who was reassigned to different tasks and then suspended for a month before being reinstated with full backpay.

The court’s low bar for what constitutes retaliation turns many mistaken complaints of discrimination into future lawsuits. Under federal court rulings, even groundless complaints are often protected against retaliation. Complaints to an employer are protected as long as the complainant reasonably believes that discrimination or harassment occurred, even if it didn’t. And complaints to the EEOC are protected even if they are plainly unreasonable, intemperate, and false. So an employee who has never been discriminated against can sue over deteriorating relationships with co-workers whom the employee has falsely accused of discrimination, claiming that the bad relationships constitute a “hostile environment” in retaliation for claiming discrimination.

In an attempt to forestall some such suits, the Supreme Court added a caveat to its test. It declared that “snubbing by supervisors or co-workers” or “petty slights” in response to a claim of discrimination do not rise to the level of retaliation, since they would not be sufficiently “materially adverse” to dissuade someone from complaining of discrimination. Whether or not that caveat is consistent with the court’s general test, it is welcome from a First Amendment perspective. As Judge Kozinski observed in Brooks v. City of San Mateo, 229 F.3d 917 (9th Cir. 2000), banning all criticism or ostracism in response to a discrimination charge may well violate the First Amendment freedoms of speech and association.

But the Supreme Court’s caveat may not be enough to protect First Amendment rights. For example, in Bain v. City of Springfield, 678 N.E.2d 155 (Mass. 1997), a mayor publicly denounced as unfounded a sexual harassment complaint against him. It is easy to see how such a public denial might dissuade a publicity-shy complainant from bringing an accusation. But as the Massachusetts Supreme Court observed, defining his speech as unlawful retaliation would clash with the First Amendment. Retaliation prohibitions are “subject to constitutional guarantees of freedom of speech. The interest in remedying discrimination is weighty but not so weighty as to justify what amounts to a restriction on core political speech.” Since the Supreme Court has set the bar so low, the courts may need to exempt speech about the merits of discrimination claims to prevent censorship.

But some judges will probably refuse to do so. Judge Myron Thompson held an employer liable for retaliation for publicly criticizing a discrimination complaint, rejecting a First Amendment defense on the ground that since sexual harassment law supposedly trumps the First Amendment, so do laws against retaliation.

“VA Barred from Publicizing Offer to Vets”

Brook no competition dept.: “A federal judge temporarily has barred the government from publicizing its free credit monitoring offer to veterans whose personal data was stolen and wants to see if they might get a better federal offer. Lawyers who have filed a class-action lawsuit on behalf of the 26.5 million veterans and active-duty troops affected contend that accepting the government’s offer could jeopardize their chance of winning more money in the privacy suit.” (Hope Yen, AP/Washington Post, Jun. 26)(hat tip: Florida Masochist).

New guestblogger Hans Bader

Joining us this week as a guestblogger is Hans Bader, Counsel for Special Projects at the Competitive Enterprise Institute in Washington. Hans is a frequent visitor to our comments section; his current projects for CEI include constitutional challenges to the 1998 tobacco Master Settlement Agreement and to the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board created by Sarbanes-Oxley. Before joining CEI he was at the Center for Individual Rights where his work included constitutional and civil rights litigation, including free speech and workplace claims.

Update: Devastated by cheating spouse

In the much-watched case we discussed last week (Jun. 21), the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that compensation could indeed be awarded a wife for her inability to work due to ongoing trauma from her ex-husband’s infidelity years earlier. Per the Globe and Mail:

Some legal experts said yesterday that the vague and self-contradictory nature of the ruling may encourage litigation from other estranged spouses who want to mount similar arguments based on their emotionally fragile state.

“What has opened up is a new route for people to argue that they cannot become self-sufficient,” said University of Toronto law professor Brenda Cossman.

(Kirk Makin, “Divorce ruling threatens to open floodgates”, Globe & Mail, Jun. 22).

Jack Thompson being risible faster than we can post about it

Overlawyered favorite Jack Thompson (Jun. 9, Apr. 14, ad infinitum) is perturbed that his publishing house, Tyndale House, is licensing a video game based on the Left Behind books. Thompson is especially upset that the game will offer players the option to take the role of the anti-Christ. He’s certainly entitled to break off his publishing relationship (doing so shows admirable consistency) and attempt to enlist others in a boycott, but his threat to take “legal action” on grounds of unspecified “tortious conduct” seems questionable. (via Rickey)

By popular demand: the $400,000 permanent erection

You’ve seen the AP press coverage. Charles Lennon had a pre-Viagra surgery to install a prosthesis, but had trouble keeping it in a concealed position; the legal opinion reveals he also complained about the product’s discomfort and noise. He won $400,000 after a jury trial. I don’t know whether the jury was correct. On the one hand, the description is one of a bad product failure. On the other hand, Lennon had trouble meeting federal evidentiary standards, and dismissed with prejudice the case he filed in federal court, rather than face the results of a summary judgment motion; moreover, an Oklahoma case against the manufacturer also suggests that the manufacturer didn’t do anything actionable. (Lennon also sued his doctor and his hospital; they won below.)

What nobody has mentioned is that the case turned on a lawyer’s use of Latin. The reference in the notice of appeal was to “Dacomed Corp., et al.” But Rule 3(c) requires parties to be named with specificity in such a notice. Thus, co-defendant National Union Fire Insurance was not allowed to appeal—and the appeal may very well have been dispositive in its favor, because Dacomed’s appeal—based on res judicata because they had succeeded in a previous federal lawsuit after two First Circuit appeals—was successful. The ruling is correct: better to have a straightforward rule that can be neutrally applied than a vague multi-factor balancing test that essentially permits a judge to let sympathy into play, and the insurer was on the wrong side of the rule. But when so much turns on something so seemingly trivial, judges should not be surprised that appellate briefing costs so much. Lennon v. Dacomed Corp. (R.I. Jun. 23, 2006).

Read On…

A thought about law and economics

It’s one thing for a blogger to suggest that there is something inherently wrong with the arguments of “people without serious legal training [who] comment on the law.” That’s just argumentum ad verecundiam. But it’s especially ironic coming from a blogger who doesn’t reveal his credentials and hides behind a pseudonym.

That same blogger writes:

I don’t think that economics is the best field to inform issues of substantive law, unless, of course, the substantive law explicitly refers to economic decisions.

Of course, all substantive law—tort, contract, property, criminal—explicitly refers to economic decisions; anyone who thinks otherwise hasn’t had serious economic training or hasn’t thought about the law seriously, because economics is merely the study of choice and decision-making in a world of scarce resources. But perhaps Justice Holmes is also a dilettante for suggesting that incentives matter.

Others will be fascinated to learn from the blog post that “going to faculty committee meetings” is a prerequisite for economic analysis, and that Richard Posner, Dan Fischel, and Nobel Prize winner Ronald Coase are not economists because they lack Ph.D.s.