Case Information
*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CAROLYN GALLOWAY, et al .,
Plаintiffs, v. Civil Action No. 15-979 (RDM) CHUGACH GOVERNMENT SERVICES,
INC.,
Defendants. MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiffs Carolyn Galloway, Desiree McKeiver, and Carlette Ososanya are current or former employees of Chugach Government Services, Inc. (“Chugach”). Plaintiffs allege that they frequently worked more than 40 hours per week without receiving overtime pay in violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) and the D.C. Minimum Wage Act (“DCMWA”). Chugach seeks to dismiss the complaint, arguing that it lacks the type of detail required to state a claim under the FLSA or the DCMWA. And, Chugach further contends that, even if the core allegations of the complaint were sufficient, it lacks any non-conclusory allegations in support of Plaintiffs contention that the alleged violations were willful. [1] For the reasons explainеd below, the Court will deny Chugach’s motion.
I. BACKGROUND
For purposes of Chugach’s motion to dismiss, the following allegations from the
Plaintiffs’ second amended complaint are taken as true.
See, e.g.
,
Hishon v. King & Spalding
,
Galloway was employed by Chugach as a Resident Advisor from 2003 through December 2014. Compl. ¶ 5. Ososanya held the same position from 2009 through April 2015, and McKeiver has worked as a Resident Advisor since 2010 and remains a Chugach employee. Id. ¶¶ 6–7. Plaintiffs estimate that about 20 more people work in the same or similar positions. Id. ¶ 8. Resident Advisors “oversee[] and assist[] the residents in the Potomac Job Corps dormitories.” Id. ¶ 9. Both Plaintiffs and the similarly situated employees were scheduled to work five eight-hour shifts per week; each shift was scheduled to lаst a total of nine hours, but included a one-hour meal break. Id. ¶¶ 10-11.
Despite this standard, 40-hour per week schedule, Plaintiffs allege that they often worked extra hours for which they did not receive compensation. They allege that they were often (three to five times a week) required to work during their meal breaks but that Chugach deducted one hour per shift regardless of whether they actually received a break. Id. ¶¶ 11–16. They allege that they were often (as many as four to five days a week) required to work for 20–30 minutes beyond their scheduled shifts while they waited for their “relief” to arrive but did not receive compensation for this extra work. ¶¶ 17–21. And finally, they allege that they were “regularly” required to work more than five shifts per week but were not paid overtime wages for work performed in excess of 40 hours per week. Id . ¶¶ 22–29.
*3 Overall, Plaintiffs allege that they (and other similarly situated employees) “were regularly denied approval for overtime” even though they “worked at least 250 hours of overtime per year during the [three] years immediately preceding the filing of [the] complaint.” Compl. ¶¶ 32, 34. Invoking both the FLSA, 29 U.S.C. § 201, et seq. , and the DCMWA, D.C. Code § 32- 1001, et seq ., they seek their unpaid, overtime wages and benefits; an additional, equal amount as liquidated damages; prejudgment interest; and attorneys’ fees and costs.
II. DISCUSSION
Arguing that the standards applicable under the FLSA and the DCMWA are “virtually
identical,” Dkt. 8-1 at 7 n.2, Chugach devotes its attention to attacking the adequacy of
Plaintiffs’ FLSA сlaim. If that claim fails on the pleadings, according to Chugach, so must
Plaintiffs’ DCMWA claim. At least for present purposes, the Court agrees that the sufficiency of
both counts of the complaint rise or fall together.
See Calles v. BPA E. US, Inc.
, Civ. No. 91-
2298,
A. The Adequacy of Plaintiffs’ FLSA Claim
The FLSA “ordinarily requires employers to pay employees time-and-one-half for hours
worked beyond [40] per week unless the employees are exempt.”
Robinson-Smith v. Gov’t
Emps. Ins. Co.,
Chugach does not dispute that Plaintiffs have adequately pled the first, second, and fourth elements of an FLSA claim. Instead, it argues that Plaintiffs’ complaint fails to include sufficient detail regarding the number of hours they allegedly worked, Chugach’s timekeeping policy, whether Plaintiffs complained about Chugach’s overtime policies, what responsе they received to any such complaints, and whether their hourly pay varied over the relevant period. Dkt. 8-1 at 7. As explained below, the Court concludes that the complaint contains sufficient detail to state a claim.
Although it was once sufficient for a plaintiff merely to recite the elements of her cause
of action,
see Conley v. Gibson,
The district courts are split, however, regarding how this pleading requirement applies to
claims arising under the FLSA.
See Landers v. Quality Comms., Inc.
,
In the Court’s view, there is no reason to treat an FLSA claim in a manner different from
any garden-variety claim. Plaintiffs’ complaint must therefore “‘give the defendant fair notice of
what the . . . claim is and the grounds upon which it rests,’”
Twombly
,
Except in the narrow class оf cases governed by Rule 9(b), the relevant question is simply whether the complaint includes sufficient detail to satisfy the “plausibility” standard and to provide fair notice to the defendant about the substance of the plaintiff’s claim. Neither of those considerations requires the type of specifics that Chugach would demand. To the contrary, as Judge Huvеlle observed in a similar case, requiring a plaintiff to allege the specific number of hours she worked “adds nothing as far as the plausibility standard is concerned.” Driscoll 42 F. Supp. 3d at 58–59. There is no de minimis exception to the FLSA, and thus a failure to identify the full extent of the violation does not render a claim implausible. And, although it might aid an FLSA defendant to know the actual number of overtime hоurs that the plaintiff claims to have worked, that information is not necessary to put the defendant on notice about the nature of the plaintiff’s claim. Id .
Here, Plaintiffs’ complaint comfortably satisfies the usual pleading standard. It alleges three different circumstances giving rise to Plaintiffs’ claims: Churgach’s failure to credit the Resident Advisors for time worked during their supposed “meal breaks”; its failure to compensate the Resident Advisors for time worked at the end of their shifts while they awaited for relief to arrive; and its failure to pay overtime even when Resident Advisors worked more than five, eight-hour shifts a week. Compl. ¶ 34. The complaint, moreover, makes some effort at quantifying these asserted violations, alleging that the Resident Advisors typically worked *7 through their meal breaks three to five times a week; that they were required to work beyond the end of their scheduled shifts “as many as” four to five “days per week;” and that they were “regularly” required to work more than five shifts per week. Id. ¶¶ 11–29. Finally, the complaint specifies that “Plaintiffs and other similarly situated” emplоyees “worked at least 250 hours of overtime per year” over the course of the three-year period of time covered by the complaint. ¶ 32.
Given these factual allegations, the Court has little trouble concluding that Plaintiffs have
provided “adequate factual support to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’”
Blue
v. District of Columbia
,
Chugach also argues that, even if Plaintiffs have stated a claim for relief under the FLSA, they have not adequately pled “a plausible factual basis on which to justify a claim of willfulness.” Dkt. 8-1 at 7. If correct, that failure would preclude Plaintiffs from seeking relief for a third year of alleged violations under the FLSA’s two-tiered statute of limitations. Id. As explained bеlow, the Court rejects this contention as well.
The FLSA provides different statutes of limitations for “ordinary violations and willful
violations.”
McLaughlin v. Richland Shoe Co.
,
Chugach argues that Plaintiffs’ complaint fails adequately to allege a claim for a willful violation of the FLSA for two reаsons. First, it argues that the complaint is at odds with Richland Shoe because it does nothing more than allege an “underlying violation” of the FLSA and that Chugach had “general knowledge” of the law’s requirements. Dkt. 8-1 at 10. Second, it argues that the complaint is at odds with Iqbal and Twombly because it offers nothing more than labels and conclusions with respect to the willfulness requirement. at 9.
Chugach’s first argument correctly characterizes
Richland Shoe
but misreads the
сomplaint. It is not enough, as Chugach stresses, for a plaintiff to allege facts that merely show
that the employer knew that the FLSA “was in the picture,” yet failed to comply.
Richland Shoe
,
Chugach is on firmer ground in arguing that Plaintiffs’ allegations of a willful violation invoke little more than labels and conclusory statements, although the Court is, once again, convinced that the complaint contains sufficiеnt detail to survive a motion to dismiss. As Chugach correctly observes, Plaintiffs’ allegations of willfulness are sparse. The complaint alleges, for example, that Chugach’s “systems, practices and duties” were “willful and intentional,” Compl. ¶ 42; that Chugach “has been aware of the requirements of the FLSA and its regulations” but has nevertheless “failed and refused to pay its employees in accordance with the FLSA,” id. ¶ 43; and that Chugach’s failure to pay Plaintiffs and their coworkers for overtime work “in violation of the FLSA” was “willful and intentional,” id. ¶¶ 49–50.
Plaintiffs do not dispute that the complaint fails to identify a smoking gun of a willful
violation. There is no allegation, for example, that Chugach documented a decision not to
comply in a memorandum or policy or that it turned away complaints of noncompliance with
specified provisions of the FLSA without explanation. Instead, Plaintiffs argue that the question
of willfulness is a highly fact-specific inquiry that should be “left to the ultimate trier of fact.”
Dkt. 9 at 6–7;
see also Figueroa v. District of Columbia
,
Courts have recognized that allеgations regarding an opposing party’s state of mind are
inevitably fraught. For this reason, Rule 9(b) provides that “[m]alice, intent, knowledge, and
other conditions of a person’s mind may be alleged generally.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b). But as the
Supreme Court has cautioned, “‘generally’ is a relative term,” and, “[i]n the context of Rule 9” it
merely relieves “a party from pleading” state of mind “under an elevated pleading standard.”
Iqbal
,
The Court concludes that Plaintiffs have alleged facts sufficient to suрport a plausible inference that Chugach knew it was violating the FLSA or showed reckless disregard to the matter. Plaintiffs allege that they were “forced to regularly and routinely work through their meal breaks,” that they “were not allowed to leave their work locations at the end of their shifts,” that they “were not permitted to record this additional time,” that Chugach “maintained an unlawful policy and procedure of not paying overtime wages,” and that Chugach’s “payroll system would not accept any time entries . . . that resulted in excess of 40 records hours for any week.” Compl. ¶¶ 11–28. Even more importantly, the complaint permits the inference that Chugach was aware that any work beyond a 40-hour wоrk week would impose unique burdens on it. The complaint alleges, for example, that employees were “regularly denied approval for overtime” for work performed in excess of 40 hours per week, at least suggesting that Chugach knew that it had to pay overtime wages in such a situation. ¶ 34. Although more may be required to prevail at trial—or on summary judgment—these allegations are sufficient to give rise to a plausible inference that Churgach knew that it was required to pay overtime wages under the FLSA but failed to do so.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Chugach’s motion to dismiss, Dkt. 8, is DENIED . SO ORDERED . /s/ Randolph D. Moss
RANDOLPH D. MOSS United States District Judge Date: August 4, 2016
Notes
[1] Chugach also argues that Plaintiffs’ request for “court-supervised notice to putative collective mеmbers” is premature. Dkt. 8-1 at 2. But, as Plaintiffs note, they have not yet asked the Court to take any action with respect to any similarly situated employees. Dkt. 9 at 7–8. Accordingly, this issue is not for ripe for review.
[2] All citations to the complaint are to the amended complaint found at Dkt. 7.
[3] The Supreme Court has held that the definition of “willful” in the ADEA is the same as the definition applied for purposes of the FLSA. See Trans World Airlines, Inc. v. Thurston , 469 U.S. 111, 128–29 (1985).
