MEMORANDUM OPINION
This mаtter originally came before the Court on Defendant’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings (DN 16). Defendant attached documentary evidence to the motion that was not relied upon by Plaintiff in her complaint. In accordance with the Federal Rules, the Court considered Defendant’s motion in the context of a Rule 56 summary judgment motion. To allow the parties an opportunity tо submit pertinent affidavits and present arguments to address the Rule 56 standard, the Court ordered each party to submit a sur-reply. (DN 25). Plaintiff and Defendant have each filed timely replies (DN 27; DN 28). This motion is now ripe for adjudication. For the reasons that follow, Defendant’s *572 Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Angela Marie Dunn was employed as a Customer Development Specialist with Defendant Gordon Food Services (“GFS”) from August of 2003 until October of 2008. Prior to her employment, Dunn filled out an Application for Employment (“Application”). The last page of the Application presented eleven clauses that each applicant to GFS agreed to before being considered for employment. The fourth clause stated the following:
LIMITATION ON CLAIMS: I agree that any action or suit against [GFS] arising out оf any employment or termination of employment, including but not limited to claims arising under the State or Federal civil rights statutes, must be brought within one year of the event giving rise to the claim or be forever barred. I waive any statute of limitations to the contrary.
DN 28-1 at 6. In all capital letters above this clause was the phrase “PLEASE READ EACH SECTION CAREFULLY AND CHECK THE BOX.” Id. Dunn checked the corresponding box and signed the application on August 9, 2004. 1 Id.
On October 3, 2008, Dunn was terminated by GPS. On April 9, 2010, Dunn filed the current action in Bullitt Circuit Court alleging against GFS the state-law causes of action of wrongful termination, age and gender discrimination, and creating a hostile work environment. GFS made a timely removal of this action to this Court 2 and filed its Motion for Judgement ■ on the Pleadings, belatedly transformed into a Rule 56 Motion for Summary Judgment, on May 28, 2010.
STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate where “the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). In determining whether summary judgment is appropriate, a court must resolve all ambiguities and draw all reasonable inferences against the mоving party.
See Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
“[N]ot every issue of fact or conflicting inference presents a genuine issue of material fact.”
Street v. J.C. Bradford & Co.,
Finally, while Kentucky statе law is applicable to this case pursuant to
Erie Railroad v. Tompkins,
DISCUSSION
GFS moves for summary judgment on the basis of the Application and its one-year limitations provision. It argues that since eighteen months passed between Dunn’s termination and the filing of this suit, and because she had agreed in the Application to bring any claims arising from her employment within one year of the tortious event, this action is untimely and must be dismissed. Dunn charges that this would be improper for three reasons: (1) Kentucky law does not allow the waiver of a statute of limitations in an employment contract; (2) Dunn did not knowingly and voluntarily execute the waiver located in the Application; (3) as Dunn is an at-will employee, she cannot waive certain rights in the Application and still be relegated to an at-will status.
I. The Supreme Court of Kentucky would permit a waiver of the prevailing statute of limitations in an employment application.
Dunn first argues that the limitation on claims found on the final page of the Application is “contrary to Kentucky law.” DN 27 at 3. GFS on the other hand states that while Kentucky courts have not yet examined “whether an employee can contractually agree to a shortened limitations period to bring claims arising out of their employment,” previously declared precedent indicates that the Supreme Court of Kentucky would uphold such a provision. DN 16-2 at 6.
Under Kentucky law, actions where liability is imposed by statute are entitled to a five-year statute of limitations. KRS § 413.120(2). The causes of actions Dunn cites, wrongful termination, age and gender discrimination, and creating a hostile work environment, are predicated on KRS § 344 et seq., and therefore typically subject to the limitations period of § 413.120(2).
See Ky. Com’n on Human Rights v. City of Owensboro,
Kentucky courts have upheld waivers of the statute of limitations in insurance con
*574
tracts.
Hale v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Kentucky, Inc.,
While Kentucky has not specifically addressed a waiver of the statute of limitations in this context, courts in this state have interpreted agreements between employers and employees under similar circumstances. In
Higdon Food Service, Inc. v. Walker,
The Court believes that these cases offer the best indication of how the Kentucky Supreme Court would interpret Kentucky law as aрplied to this particular factual scenario. The circumstances by which Dunn agreed to the terms of the Application belie any notion that the two parties were in similar negotiating positions when she signed the document. 4 Nevertheless, the employees in Walker and Shadeh were in near identical positions, required to waive certain legal rights or face likely termination. In those cases, the courts of Kentucky and thоse applying Kentucky law found that employer-employee agreements may be executed in exchange for merely retaining one’s job. The Court sees no reason why the highest court in *575 Kentucky would not extend this logic and permit an applicant to surrender certain statutory rights in exchange for being considered for employment, provided the other conditions of a lawful waiver are also met.
To further predict the decision of the Kentucky Supreme Court, the Court next looks to other jurisdictions for similar cases. It need not look far. In
Thurman v. DaimlerChrysler, Inc.,
Dunn offers that in
Elkins v. Ky. Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co.,
Next, the Court must answer the inquiry of whether the one-year limitations period on the Appliсation is reasonable. After reviewing Kentucky’s case law, decisions of other jurisdictions, and pertinent federal statutes, the Court believes that it is. While customarily Dunn would have five years to bring this suit, Kentucky courts have repeatedly upheld comparable reductions in the typical statute of limitations.
Hale,
Accordingly, the Court finds that a waiver in an employment application is congruent with Kentucky law and that this particular waiver is reasonable on its face.
II. Dunn’s waiver was knowing and voluntary.
Interpreting Kentucky law as to allow a waiver of the statute of limitations in an employment application is only the first step of this Court’s analysis. The next inquiry is whether Dunn’s waiver was knowing and voluntary. 6
According to Kentucky law “[t]he common definition of a legal waiver is that it is a voluntary and intentional surrender or relinquishment of a known right, or an election to forego аn advantage which the party at his option might have demanded or insisted upon.”
Greathouse v. Shreve,
(1) plaintiffs experience, background, and education; (2) the amount of time plaintiff had to consider whether to sign the waiver, including whether ... [there was] an opportunity to consult with a lawyer; (3) the clarity of the waiver; (4) consideration for the waiver; (5) the totality of the circumstances.
*577
Williams v. Osborne,
Nos. 2002-CA-000186-MR, 2002-CA-000187,
Dunn declares that under the totality of the circumstances, her waiver was neither knowing nor voluntary. To buttress this assertion, she states that she received only a high school education, was given insufficient time to review the Application, and was unable to consult an attorney before signing it. This information however is relayed through her counsel’s responses to these motions, as Dunn has failed to submit an affidavit providing the circumstances under which she signed the document. In transforming GFS’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings into this Motion for Summary Judgment, the Court gave explicit instructions that Dunn should attach pertinent affidavits. DN 25. Without them, the Court is left merely to rely on the substantive documents submitted by GFS in determining whether Dunn’s wаiver was knowing and voluntary. 7
Even if the Court accepted Dunn’s argument, which it does not, it is insufficient to carry the day. Dunn’s counsel argues that because of her high school education and inability to seek the advice of a lawyer, she was incapable of knowingly and voluntarily waiving her statutory rights in the employment application. GFS however urges the Court to dismiss this argument, citing this circuit’s propensity for granting summary judgment where a non-moving party fails to provide affidavits supporting its position.
See e.g., Alexander v. CareSource,
III. Kentucky law allows an at-will employee to enter an employment agreement while maintaining their at-will status.
Lastly, Dunn avers that since her position with GFS was at-will, she could not enter an agreemеnt with her employer and still be considered an at-will employee. She declares that GFS “cannot disclaim the existence of an employment contract and in the same breath require [Dunn] to adhere to other agreements that favor the employer.” DN 27 at 2. Dunn fails to cite prior case law in support of this proposition.
Kentucky’s law adheres to the at-will doctrine unless the parties agree otherwise.
Noel v. Elk Brand Mfg. Co.,
Even taking the view most favorable to Dunn and assuming that the Application is an employment contract, her argument still must fail. The Application also contains a provision that classifies Dunn as an at-will employee. DN 28-1 at 6. The practice of having written agreements between employers and employees with an employee maintaining their at-will status has been previously upheld by Kentucky courts.
Moore v. City of New Haven,
No. 2010-CA-000019-MR,
CONCLUSION
After careful review of the state’s laws as well as the legal current throughout the country, the Court believes that the Kentucky Supreme Court would permit a waiver of the statute of limitations in a job application. Consequently, Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED. An appropriate order shall issue.
Notes
. Keith Masoud, the Director of-Human Resources for GFS, has affirmed that the executed employment agreement attached to this motion was found in Dunn's personnel file and that it is company policy to have all GFS employees to fill out the Application. DN 28-1 at 2.
. Dunn filed a motion to remand on the basis that co-defendant Patriсk Mulkey destroyed the diversity of citizenship between the parties. The Court decided however that Mulkey had been fraudulently joined in this action to defeat diversity, dismissed him as a defendant, and denied Dunn's Motion to Remand. DN 25.
. The employee specifically testified that his employer "didn't put it where you'd be fired or anything, but I took it that if I didn't sign it I probably ... I wouldn’t be there long either.”
Walker,
. In an affidavit attachеd to its Motion for Summary Judgment GFS's director of Human Resources claims that before employees are hired, they are required to complete the Application. DN 28. It is difficult to imagine that in initially petitioning GFS for employment, Dunn possessed any appreciable bargaining power such that she could have rejected this particular term of the Application and still' have been hired by GFS.
. An number of other federal courts outside the footprint of the sixth circuit have also upheld these provisions in employment applications, barring both state and federal claims.
See e.g., Ravenscraft v. BNP Media, Inc.,
No. 09-C-6617,
. The Court examines Dunn’s waiver of the prevailing statute of limitations under Kentucky law. Clearly, she did not waive her right to bring these claims, only the time period whereby they could have been pursued.
. GFS has offered an affidavit from Keith Masoud describing the process by which job applicants, such as Dunn, execute the application.
