MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
On March 25, 2002, I granted in part and denied in part the City’s motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ age discrimination and due process complaints.
See Drnek v. City of Chicago,
whether allegedly illicit motives on the part of individual legislators and municipal officials for enacting a retirement plan that mandatorily retires police and fire personnel at age 63 and results in their replacement with younger workers can demonstrate subterfuge under section 623(j) of the ADEA.
Mot. at 5.1 also treat the motion as one to reconsider in light of the City’s primary reliance on a case that it did not cite in its underlying briefs. See Minute Order of 4/10/02.
I. Motion to Reconsider
“Motions for reconsideration serve a limited function; to correct manifest errors of law or fact or to present newly discovered evidence. Such motions cannot in any case be employed as a vehicle to
The City challenges a very narrow part of my opinion: my consideration of the plaintiffs allegations of discriminatory animus in deciding that there were questions of fact precluding dismissal. At oral argument, the plaintiffs produced allegations that the City’s true purpose for enacting the mandatory retirement ordinance was to clear out older employees to make room for promotional opportunities for younger employees. The City argued, then and now, that I could not look beyond the face of the ordinance to determine whether it was a subterfuge to evade the purposes of the ADEA. I rejected the City’s reliance on
Pacific Gas Electric Co. v. State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission,
Bell
involved an application of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Public Employees Retirement System of Ohio v. Betts,
Noting that the purposes of the ADEA could not be separated from its substantive provisions, the Court held that a plan enacted after the enactment of the ADEA “cannot be a subterfuge to evade the
Thus, in order to give effect to both § 623(a)(1) and § 623(f)(2), the Court concluded that § 623(f)(2) “exempt[s] the provisions of a bona fide benefit plan from the purview of the ADEA so long as the plan is not a method of discriminating in other, non-fringe-benefit aspects of the employment relationship.”
Id.
After considering the legislative history, the Court concluded that “this result permits employers wide latitude in structuring employee benefit plans, [but) it does not render the ‘not a subterfuge’ proviso a dead letter.”
Id.
at 180,
The Seventh Circuit in
Bell
recited these standards and applied them to an employee challenge to a pension benefit plan that discontinued pension contributions for employees above the age of 65 even if those employees continued to work. Noting the two examples of subterfuge from
Betts,
the court held that the plaintiffs had not produced any evidence that would bring them within the purview of the examples.
The City argues that the Seventh Circuit’s language and reasoning in
Bell
precludes the plaintiffs in this case from relying on evidence of discriminatory motives
Cases construing § 6230 have by and large adopted the
Betts
definition of “subterfuge” as a “scheme, plan, stratagem, or artifice of evasion.”
See, e.g., Glennon v. Village of South Barrington,
No. 00 C 1264,
There is some consistency between the City’s interpretation here and the
Betts/Bell
interpretation. For example, the City argued in the reply to its original motion that construing “subterfuge” to mean that any discharge on the basis of age is a subterfuge to evade the purposes of the ADEA because it violates § 623(a)(1) would eviscerate the exception in § 6230, which says that mandatory retirement on the basis of age is legal. The Supreme Court rejected a similar interpretation of subterfuge in the context of § 623(f).
Betts,
However, the City’s interpretation, which is essentially an extension of the
Betts/Bell
interpretation of § 623(f), would render the “not a subterfuge” provision of § 6230, if not dead, at least moribund. An interpretation that requires a violation of the timing requirements in § 6230(1) in order to find that the challenged action is a subterfuge under § 6230(2) collapses the two inquiries. This circular reading of “not a subterfuge” in § 6230(2) would provide no protection that is not found elsewhere in the statute. By contrast, the exception in § 623(f) related only to fringe benefits, but left undisturbed all of the non-fringe aspects of the employment relationship that are protected by § 623(a), the “ADEA’s primary enforcement mechanism.”
Betts,
It was for this reason that I held that evidence of subjective intent to discriminate on the basis of age was relevant to the question of subterfuge under § 623(j). Section 623(j) only applies if a mandatory retirement plan both meets the age requirements in § (j)(l) and is not a subterfuge under § (j)(2). The City’s interpretation based on Bell, that facial compliance with (j)(l) precludes me from looking elsewhere for evidence of subterfuge, would eviscerate the requirement that the plan not be a subterfuge. Therefore, I decline to apply the reasoning of Bell under § 623(f) to this case under § 623(j). Bell does not address Pacific Gas, or the reasons that I gave for distinguishing it and considering potential subjective proof of subterfuge, so it is not a basis for reconsideration of the narrow issue presented by the City in its motion. However, I will consider separately the propriety of certifying an interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).
II. Motion to Certify an Interlocutory Appeal
The denial of a motion to dismiss is not a “final decision” from which an immediate appeal is available under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Cherry v. University of Wisc. Sys. Bd. of Regents,
The City asks me to certify the following question: whether allegedly illicit motives on the part of individual legislators and municipal officials for enacting a retirement plan that mandatorily retires police and fire personnel at age 63 and results in their replacement with younger workers can demonstrate subterfuge under section 623(j) of the ADEA. So framed, this is not a controlling question, because it is too early in the lawsuit to determine that this is the only type of evidence of subterfuge that the plaintiffs could discover. I ordered the plaintiffs to come forward with any facts, consistent with Fed. Rule Civ. P. 11, to support their allegations of subterfuge in order to determine whether this case was distinguishable from
Kopec v. City of Elmhurst,
Nonetheless, I am of the opinion that there is a controlling legal question
1
: whether a plaintiff can demonstrate subterfuge under § 623(j)(2) with
any
kind of evidence if there is no violation of § 623(j)(l). This is a pure question of law because it involves the construction of a statutory provision.
See Ahrenholz,
Notes
. 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) does not require that I accept the City's proposed question for certification. That statute provides that "[w]hen a district judge, in making [an otherwise non-appealable order in a civil case], shall be of the opinion that such order involves a controlling question of law as to which there is substantial ground for a difference of opinion .. ., [s]he shall so state in writing in such order.”
