RULING ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS
This lawsuit arises out of plaintiffs claim • that she was discriminated against by the defendants after she informed them of her pregnancy. Specifically, plaintiff claims that she was demoted and eventually terminated from her position. Plaintiff seeks to hold liable the defendant Connecticut Family Orthopedics (“CFO”) and individual defendants, Drs. Lawrence Schweitzer, Ronald Ripps, James DePuy, and F. Scott Gray, who are employees and the sole shareholders of CFO.
Plaintiffs complaint alleges four counts against all of the defendants: (1) violation of Title VII, (2) violation of Connecticut Fair Employment Practices Act (“CFE-PA”), (3) breach of contract, and (4) breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Plaintiff has withdrawn her counts three and four against the individual defendants.
Defendants have filed a motion to dismiss all counts of the complaint.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff, Regina Maloney, was employed by defendant CFO from 1989 to 1997 as the Manager of Physical Therapy. CFO is a professional corporation engaged in the practice of orthopedic, medicine. In November 1994, Ms. Maloney and CFO entered into negotiations for an employment contract. On behalf of CFO, Dr. Ripps offered Ms. Maloney a three year employment contract. However, after Ms. Malo-
In 1996, she accepted an employment contract that significantly reduced her benefits and working conditions. In 1997, the defendants offered her a contract which made further reductions to her benefits and working conditions. When Ms. Maloney attempted to discuss the terms of the contract, CFO withdrew its contract offer and terminated her employment.
Ms. Maloney filed charges with both the EEOC and CHRO alleging discrimination by CFO based on sex. The complaint filed with the EEOC and CHRO did not specifically allege discrimination by the individual doctors presently named in her federal complaint.
DISCUSSION
The function of a motion to dismiss is “merely to assess the legal feasibility of the complaint, not to assay the weight of the evidence which might be offered in support thereof.”
Ryder Energy Distribution v. Merrill Lynch Commodities, Inc.,
A. Counts One and Two
1. Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies
The defendants seek dismissal of the two discrimination counts, claiming that Ms. Maloney failed to satisfy the exhaustion of administrative remedies requirement. Since federal law on this issue is applicable to CFEPA, the Court will analyze counts one and two together.
Malasky v. Metal Products Corp.,
As a general rule, a private civil action under Title VII can be brought only against parties who are first named in a complaint filed with the EEOC.
See
42 U.S.C. § 2000e—5(f)(1). The twofold purpose of this exhaustion requirement is (1) to provide actual notice of the pending complaint to those alleged to have committed the violations, and (2) to provide the charged parties an opportunity to seek a resolution of the matter without resort to the federal courts.
Maturo v. National Graphics, Inc.,
A limited exception to the exhaustion requirement exists where the two underlying purposes of this rule are satisfied.
Bapat v. Connecticut Department of Health Services,
In the instant case, Ms. Maloney did not name the individual defendants in
The defendants urge the Court to restrict the exception to instances where the party filed the administrative charges pro se. Defendants assert that Ms. Maloney has been represented by counsel from the time she filed her EEOC charge. As the Court does not have sufficient information concerning the extent of Ms. Maloney’s legal representation, the Court will not prohibit the exception on such grounds.
Further, the defendants assert that Ms. Maloney has failed to exhaust her administrative remedies as to certain allegations that were not made in her administrative filings.
See Wilds v. U.S. Postmaster General,
Despite numerous line-by-line comparisons between the complaint and the administrative charge, the defendants have failed to demonstrate that the allegations of the complaint are different in character from that of the EEOC charge. A federal complaint need not mirror the administrative complaint.
Kent v. AVCO Corporation,
2. Individual Liability Pursuant to Title VII
The defendants argue that Ms. Maloney cannot hold the individual defendants liable pursuant to Title VII.
Although other circuits have differed on this issue, the Second Circuit has established that supervisory employees may not be held individually liable under Title VII.
Tomka v. Seiler Corp.,
Ms. Maloney argues that the individual defendants in this case are shareholders of the corporate defendant, and therefore, should be held liable as employers for Title VII discrimination. However, she has failed to offer persuasive authority to demonstrate that the Second Circuit’s limitation on individual liability should not apply to individual shareholders. Therefore, the Court will dismiss the Title VII claims of count one against the individual defendants.
3. Statute of Limitations
Defendants argue that counts one and two should be dismissed because Ms. Maloney did not file her administrative charges within the requisite statute of limitations after the alleged discriminatory conduct took place. The continuing violation doctrine is an exception to both Title VII and state law statutes of limitations.
See Velez v. New London,
Taking all of the allegations as true, Ms. Maloney has alleged discriminatory conduct that constitutes a continuing practice of discrimination. Therefore, the Court will not dismiss counts one and two based on untimeliness.
B. Count Three Against CFO
Ms. Maloney bases her breach of contract claim against CFO on its failure to negotiate fairly a new contract prior to her termination, and its failure to pay her severance and vacation pay as provided in CFO’s employee manual.
Defendants assert that Ms. Maloney has failed to satisfy the key elements of a breach of contract claim: (1) formation of an agreement; (2) performance by one party; (3) breach of the agreement; and (4) damages.
Posner v. Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co.,
In this case, defendant terminated Ms. Maloney’s employment at the end of her prior employment contract. Therefore, no agreement existed between the parties, and Ms. Maloney cannot assert a breach of contract claim based on CFO’s failure to renew her contract.
However, Ms. Maloney has sufficiently alleged a breach of contract based on CFO’s failure to pay her severance and vacation pay as provided by the employee manual. The terms of an employee handbook may be incorporated into the existing employment contract.
Torosyan v. Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
C. Count Four
Ms. Maloney alleges that the defendant CFO breached the covenant of good faith and fair dealing due to the manner in which CFO negotiated its contracts and how it treated her during her employment and termination. Ms. Maloney’s complaint incorporates her allegations of discriminatory employment practices into her breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing claim.
Every contract carries with it a covenant of good faith and fair dealing requiring that neither party do anything that will injure the right of the other to receive the benefits of the agreement.
Habetz v. Condon,
To assert a claim based on the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, a contract must have been in existence. Therefore, Ms. Maloney cannot base her claim of a breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing on negotiations prior to the actual execution of her employment contract.
However, taking all of the allegations as true, Ms. Maloney has sufficiently alleged that CFO violated the covenant when it breached its contract to pay her severance and vacation pay as part of a discriminatory employment practice.
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, defendants’ motion to dismiss [doc. # 12] is GRANTED as to count one against the individual defendants, Drs. Schweitzer, Ripps, DePuy, and Gray. The motion to dismiss is DE
