MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Presently before the Court are defendants’ motions in limine [76]. They are resolved as follows.
1. The motion for exclusion of evidence concerning consent decrees in other actions is granted.
Defendants request that these decrees be excluded on grounds of irrelevance and prejudice.
1
In response, plaintiff argues that evidence of the consent decrees that CBS entered with the EEOC' is relevant as evidence that CBS was “favoring women, because of said decrees” and points to the arguments CBS made in its June 3, 2002 letter to the EEOC requesting reconsideration of their probable
Plaintiff also argues that evidence of the EEOC’s suit and its settlement is admissible to show an apparent propensity for generalized sex discrimination against both men and women at CBS that is inconsistent with Title VII. The “limited probative value of this evidence,” however, “is substantially outweighed by the burden that the admission of this evidence would place on [defendant] to explain the circumstances at issue in [the EEOC’s lawsuit and its settlement], by the waste of time that would accompany such explanations, and by the danger that admission of this evidence will create unfair prejudice against [defendant].”
In re WorldCom, Inc. Sec. Litig.,
2. The motion for exclusion of the EEOC’ s probable cause determination is granted.
Generally speaking, “EEOC determinations are sufficiently reliable to be admissible under the public records hearsay exception of Fed.R.Evid. 803(8)(C).”
Watson v. E.S. Sutton, Inc.,
Such documents are properly excluded, however, where the evidence’s probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.
See
Fed. R.Evid. 403;
see also Paolitto v. John Bromi E & C, Inc., et at,
The document presently in question—the determination letter from the EEOC dated May 14, 2002—contains both a finding of probable cause (“there is reason to believe that violations have occurred”) as well as a “determination on the merits” (“I conclude that the Charging Party was retaliated against.”) (Exhibit A to Pl.’s Mem. at 2.) Consequently, there is a heightened risk of unfair prejudice. In addition, it appears that substantial evidence will be presented at trial that was not presented to the EEOC.
(See
Def.’s Mem. at 9.) Exclusion of an agency’s determination is particularly appropriate where there is a “likelihood that the trial will deteriorate into a protracted and unproductive struggle over how the evidence admitted at trial compared to the evidence considered by the agency.”
Paolitto,
3. The motion for exclusion of evidence concerning DiGiovanni’s marital status and the qualifications of DiGiov-anni and Kentrianakis is granted.
DiGiovanni’s marital status and the details of his marriage have very little conceivable bearing on whether DiGiovanni failed to promote Dodson on the basis of his gender, and have the potential for unfair prejudice. Such evidence will thus be excluded at trial under Rule 403.
The professional qualifications of Di-Giovanni and Kentrianakis themselves are irrelevant under Rule 402. They have no bearing on plaintiffs allegation that CBS discriminated against him on the basis of age and gender by promoting Lori Bur-nette and Jessica Somers to full-time editor positions in early 2000 rather than plaintiff.
A The motion to exclude evidence of Holly Fontana’s 1997 hiring to a full-time position is denied.
The mere fact that events are time-barred under Title VII will not impact their admissibility if relevant to a plaintiffs claim. “Time-barred incidents are regularly admitted as background evidence in discrimination cases, subject to evidentiary rules.”
Heredia v. Small,
Here, the Court finds that the challenged, time-barred evidence “is relevant in that it tends to make the existence of the plaintiffs remaining claims more probable and lends background to plaintiffs theory of the case.”
Vernon v. Port Authority of New York and New Jersey,
5. The motion to exclude the testimony of Adams, Diederich, Dorsey, Miller, and Wiggins is denied.
As Judge Wood and Magistrate Judge Peck noted, Dodson offers the affi
6. The motion to exclude Wiggins’ testimony on the 1999 DiGiovanni comment is denied
The Court declines to exclude the comment that DiGiovanni allegedly made to Andre Wiggins regarding his preference for female editors. Allegedly, DiGiovanni said he “liked it that way” when asked about having a “lot of female editors working for him.” As Judge Wood and Magistrate Judge Peck held, “a reasonable jury could view DiGiovanni’s alleged comment as evidence of discriminatory animus.”
Dodson,
Furthermore, the comment directly touches on the question of DiGiovanni’s preference for employees of one gender, occurred directly between the two actionable hires in early 2000 and the time-barred Fontana hire, and may be reflective of the gender-based negative treatment plaintiff alleges he suffered while employed.
Schreiber v. Worldco, LLC,
Conclusion
The parties are advised that because of its posture as a ruling made in advance of trial, “an
in limine
ruling may be reviewed at trial, and ‘the district judge is free, in the exercise of sound judicial discretion, to alter a previous
in limine
ruling.’ ”
Great Earth Intern. Franchising Corp. v. Milks Development,
The parties are directed to appear for a conference in this matter in Courtroom 17B on May 5, 2006 at 10:00 a.m.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Defendants cite
Lipsky v. Commonwealth United Corp.,
