In 1999, Sidley & Austin (as it then was) demoted 32 of its equity partners to “counsel” or “senior counsel.” The EEOC began an investigation to determine whether the demotions might have violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. After we upheld the district court’s rebuff of Sidley’s effort to derail the investigation,
EEOC v. Sidley Austin Brown & Wood,
The identical question received the opposite answer in
EEOC v. North Gibson School Corp.,
Sidley seeks to distinguish
Waffle House
from the present case on the basis of the following sentence in the Court’s opinion: “It is true, as respondent and its
amici
have argued, that Baker’s conduct [Baker was the victim of the alleged violation of the ADA] may have the effect of limiting the relief that the EEOC may obtain in court.”
For all we know, some of the ex-partners may have received settlements from Sidley and others may have failed to mitigate their damages. Suppose all have received settlements that have fully compensated them for the alleged violations of the age discrimination law. Then the EEOC could obtain no monetary relief on their behalf. But this was not the basis for Sidley’s motion for partial summary judgment. The basis was a ground that
Waffle House
rejects, as we and other courts have already recognized in related contexts.
EEOC v. Caterpillar, Inc.,
Affirmed.
