MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER
Plаintiff Jack Jenkins filed a putative collective action suit against The TJX Companies Inc. (“TJX”) and HomeGoods, Inc. (“HomeGoods”) under the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq. (“FLSA”) and the New York State Labor Law (“N.Y. Labor Law”), to recover unpaid overtime compensation. Presently before the Court are the following three motions: (1) the Plaintiffs motion for conditional certification of the class for the collective action and to facilitate notice under 29 U.S.C. § 216(b); (2) the Plaintiffs motion to strike affidavits submitted by the Defendants in opposition to its motion for conditional certification; and (3) the Defendants’ cross-motion for attorney’s fees and costs based on the Plaintiff’s motion to strike.
For the reasons set forth below, the Court: (1) denies the Plaintiff’s motion for conditional certification; (2) denies the Plaintiff’s motion to strike as moot; and (3) denies the Defеndants’ cross-motion for attorneys fees and costs.
I. BACKGROUND
The Plaintiff is an employee who worked for TJX and HomeGoods (collectively “the Defendants”). Beginning in February 2006, the Plaintiff was an Assistant Store Manager (“ASM”) employed at Home-Goods’ Rockville Centre location. In or about September 2008 (according to the Plaintiff) or sometime in 2007 (according to the Defendant) the Plaintiff was subsequently promoted to Store Managеr (“SM”) at HomeGoods’ Port Washington location, where he was employed until July 2010.
On August 16, 2010, the Plaintiff commenced the present suit as a putative collective action against the Defendants. It is undisputed that the Defendants did not pay the Plaintiff overtime during his tenure as an ASM because the Defendants classify all ASMs as “exempt” from FLSA and N.Y. Labor Law overtime provisions. In his complaint, the Plaintiff alleges that the Defendants misclassified his position as “exempt” from FLSA and N.Y. Labor Law overtime provisions, and that all ASMs employed by HomeGoods were similarly mischaracterized in this manner.
One August 5, 2011, the Plaintiff moved to certify the collective action class to recover overtime pay under the FLSA and to facilitate notice under 29 U.S.C. § 216(b). The Plaintiff named as a class for the collective action “all persons employed by the Defendants, outside оf California, as assistant store managers, three years from the date of the order to the present.” (PI. Mem. In Supp. at 15.) The Defendants oppose the conditional certification. On September 9, 2011, the Plaintiff moved to strike the declarations submitted as exhibits to the Defendants’ opposition to the Plaintiffs Motion for Conditional Certification. On September 26, 2011, the Defendants made a cross motion for attorneys’ fees and costs.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Legal Standard
1. The FLSA and the Executive Exemption
The FLSA, states in relevant part, that
no employer shall employ any of his employees who in any workweek is engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for commerce, or is employedin an enterprise engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for commerce, for a workweek longer than forty hours unless such employee receives compensation for his employmеnt in excess of the hours above specified at a rate not less than one and one-half times the regular rate at which he is employed
29 U.S.C. § 207(a)(1). Employees who work in a “bona fide executive ... capacity” are exempted from the FLSA’s overtime requirements. 29 U.S.C. § 213(a)(1). Employees are classified as executive if:
they are “[c]ompensated on a salary basis”; 2) their “primary duty is management of the entеrprise ... or of a customarily recognized department or subdivision thereof’; 3) they “customarily and regularly direct[ ] the work of two or more other employees”; and 4) they “ha[ve] the authority to hire or fire other employees or” if their “suggestions and recommendations” on personnel decisions “are given particular weight.”
Myers v. Hertz Corp.,
2. Collective Action under the FLSA
29 U.S.C. § 216(b) provides that parties suing for relief under 29 U.S.C. §§ 206, 207, and 215(a)(3) may proceed “for and in behalf of himself or themselves and other employees similarly situated.” A proceeding under this provision is traditionally termed a “collective action.” Here, the Plaintiff seeks relief pursuant to Section 207 of the FLSA, which governs overtime compensation. Thus, the collective action provision of Section 216(b) is applicable.
A collective action under Section 216 is distinguishable in several ways from the more common class action under Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. First, a collective action requires class members to opt into the case, rather than opt out. See Iglesias-Mendoza v. La Belle Farm, Inc.,
3. Two Step Certification Approach
Certification of a collective action class is analyzed through a two step approach. The first step, called conditional certification, is generally completed prior to the commencement of any significant discovery. Lynch v. United Services Auto. Ass’n,
The second step in collective action certification generally arises only after discovery is completed, and only if it appears that some or all members of a conditionally certified class are not similarly situated. In that ease, a defendant may move to challenge certification, at which point a
B. Application of the Legal Standard
Here, the Plaintiff is moving for prediscovery conditional certification of the collective action class. The parties dispute whether the Plaintiff has met his burden of showing that he and the putative class are similarly situated.
The FLSA and its subsequent implementing regulations do not define the term “similarly situated.” Where, as here, the Plaintiff proposes a nationwide class, he must ultimately demonstrate a nationwide рolicy pursuant to which ASMs are assigned duties that render HomeGoods’ exempt classification inappropriate. Vasquez v. Vitamin Shoppe Industries Inc., No. 10-CV-8820,
The Plaintiff contends that he and the putative class are similarly situated because all ASMs were subject to uniform formal policies. To support his motion, the Plaintiff provides extensive evidence that HomeGoods has a uniform formal policy as to the job duties of ASMs nationwide, which include the following: (1) HomeGoods’ has one set of management training materials nationwide, (PL Ex. D at 101); (2) all locations rely on a single written job description for each category of ASM (Pl. Ex A at 56, 63; Pl. Ex. E); and (3) as the Defendants’ Rule 30(b)(6) witnesses testified to at their depositions, HomеGoods designates the same roles and responsibilities for all ASMs. (PL Ex. B at 22, 25-27).
Notably, the Plaintiff does not allege that HomeGoods’ official, formal policy mandates non-exempt job duties and thus violates the FLSA in and of itself. Rather, the Plaintiff alleges that, in practice, he primarily performed non-exempt duties, such as cleaning, sweeping, bagging products, hanging store signs, taking out the garbage, and unloading the delivery truck. (PL Ex C at 88, 90, 113-15.) The Plaintiffs sole submission in support of the existence of a common de-facto policy requiring ASMs to perform non-exempt tasks is the Plaintiffs own deposition testimony, discussing his own personal experience. However, the Plaintiff provides no other affidavits, depositions, or even hearsay evidence that he was actually aware of other ASMs who also primarily performed non-exempt duties.
Indeed, the оnly evidence cited by the Plaintiff beyond his own deposition is an excerpt from a consultant’s report purporting to show a breakdown of types of work performed by ASMs at unidentified Home-Goods stores. (PL’s Ex. G.) While it is possible that this report could reveal that other HomeGoods’ ASMs predominantly performed non-exempt work, the Court simply cannot draw any conclusions from the one page of the report that has been provided to the Court, although the Court notes that other evidence submitted by the Plaintiff indicates that the Plaintiff is in
Nevertheless, the Plaintiff contends that such evidence beyond his own testimony is unnecessary at this stage because the existence of a common national formal policy regarding job responsibilities is sufficient on its own to satisfy the “similarly situated” requirement, even where the Plaintiff does not allege that, the formal policy is itself illegal. The Plaintiff further argues that, because it is beyond dispute that other ASMs have similar official job requirements, pay schemes, and are classified as exempt, any further inquiry into whether the putative class members are “similarly situated” would be an impermissible ruling on the merits. The Court disagrees.
The Court notes that an inquiry into whether the Plaintiff has met his burden of showing that he and the putative class are “similarly situated”, is not equivalent to a merits determination. Certification at the conditional stage “is not automatic.” Vasquez,
While the burden on the plaintiff at the conditional certification stage is modest, “it is not non-existent.” Khan v. Airport Mgmt. Servs., LLC, No. 10-CV-7735,
Here, thе Court finds that the Plaintiff has failed to overcome this low threshold requirement for obtaining conditional class
Indeed, the notion that a plaintiff can satisfy his burden on a conditional certification motion merely by showing that he was subject to an illegal application of a common legal policy, are not supported by the Plaintiffs own cases. First, the Plaintiff cites to a number of cases that grant conditional class certification based on a сommon policy where that common policy is itself illegal, which the Plaintiff does not allege here. See, e.g., Realite,
Second, the Plаintiff cites to a number of cases where there was a legal common policy, but there was substantially more evidence of a de-facto illegal policy than in the instant case. See, e.g., Damassia v. Duane Reade, Inc., No. 04-CV-8819,
As United States Magistrate Judge Gorenstein noted in a similar case involving ASMs at Marshalls, a different TJX subsidiary, the argument thаt a plaintiff need only show that he performed tasks in contravention of a common legal policy “boils down to the proposition that any employee classified as exempt by a company that does business nationwide is entitled to approval of a collective action for all employees of that business — who may number in the thousands and be spread across 50 states — simply based on the employee’s testimony that he was required to perform non-exempt tasks.” Guillen v. Marshalls of MA Inc. (“Guillen II”),
The Court also notes that another district court in this Circuit recently addressed similar factuаl circumstances. In Khan v. Airport Management Services, LLC, No. 10-CV-7735,
In sum, the Plaintiff here has failed to provide any factual support for the contention that other ASMs at HomeGoods’ stores in New York, let alone nationwide, primarily performed non-exempt tasks. (PI. Dep. at 323:22-324:15.) Rather, the Plaintiff offers only his own deposition testimony describing his personal circumstances at the stores at which he worked, and one page from a consultant’s report without any explanation as to its context or relevance. Thus, at this stage, the Plaintiff has not provided the Court with anything other than conclusory allegations and his own deposition testimony to support his assertion that other HomeGoods’ ASMs also primarily performed non-ex
“Although plaintiffs’ burden at this stage of the prоceedings is modest, the court cannot justify certifying a class of plaintiffs, likely numbering in the hundreds, on the basis of such thin factual support.” Laroque,
Accordingly, the Plaintiffs motion for conditional class certification is denied. However, the motion is denied without prejudice, with leave to re-file with additional evidentiary support for the assertion that there is a policy of the Defendants that in practice is in violation of FLSA and the N.Y. Labor Laws.
C. The Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike and the Defendant’s Cross Motion for Attorneys’ Fees
The Defendants have submitted ten declarations from current HomeGoods employees, attached to their opposition to the Plaintiffs motion for conditional certification as Exhibits 12-21. The Plaintiff moves to strike these declarations and for attorney’s fees and costs accrued in filing the motion to strike. The Defendants oppose this motion and make a cross motion for attorneys’ fees. The Court did not rely on these affidavits in reaching its decision herein, and therefore, the motion to strike is denied as moot. Furthermore, upon review of the parties’ submissions and the relevant caselaw, the Court finds that neither party is entitled to attorney’s fees or costs with regard to the Defendants’ filing of the declarations and the Plaintiffs motion to strike. Accordingly, the Court denies both parties request for attorney’s fees and costs.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, it is hereby
ORDERED that the Plaintiffs motion for collective certification is DENIED without prejudice, with leave to re-file within twenty (20) days of the date of this Order; and it is further
ORDERED that the Plaintiffs motion to strike the Defendants’ affidavits is DENIED as moot; and it is further
ORDERED that the Defendants’ motion for attorney’s fees and costs is DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
