MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Patrick Munnelly, formerly an administrator of defendant Sloan Kettering Memorial Cancer Center (“Memorial” or “the Hospital”), brought this action against defendant pursuant to the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA” or “the Act”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621 et seq., alleging wrongful discharge based on age discrimination. By Order of June 18, 1990, familiarity with which is assumed, this Court denied defendant’s motion for summary judgment, finding a genuine dispute as to material facts surrounding his discharge. Presently before this Court is an in limine motion concerning the proper measure of damages, including back pay and insurance.
Background
In November 1987, plaintiff was discharged from his position as administrator at Memorial. He was 56 years old. Under Munnelly’s severance package, he would remain on Memorial’s payroll until January 1989, receiving approximately 14 monthly installments of his $78,000 annual salary. Memorial also continued to pay Munnelly’s life insurance premiums until February of 1989. Munnelly paid additional premiums under this plan, as he had during his employment with Memorial, in order to insure a death benefit of $268,000. In May 1988, seven months after his discharge from Memorial, Munnelly started working at New York’s Foundling Hospital, earning a salary of $60,000 a year. Munnelly did not purchase a new insurance package.
Discussion
Back Pay
ADEA remedies should “ensure that victims of age discrimination [be] made whole.”
Whittlesey v. Union Carbide Corp.,
The facts of the case at bar are similar to those in Sinclair. Plaintiff Sinclair secured new employment shortly after defendant wrongfully discharged him. Although he took a pay cut of approximately $10,700 per year, defendant had given plaintiff $70,000 in severance payments. The district court, in a ruling affirmed by the Third Circuit, held that the severance pay must be credited against the loss of earnings caused to the employee because of the unlawful discrimination. Id. at 401.
In the case at bar, as in Sinclair and Meschino, supra, failure to offset any damage award by the amount of his severance pay would put Munnelly in a better position than he would have been had he not been terminated. Such a recovery would go beyond the make-whole purpose of the ADEA. Considering the facts of this case in light of the directive to put victims of discrimination in the economic position they would have occupied but for the discrimination, this Court concludes that plaintiff should offset any back pay damages he may receive against the seven months of salary he concurrently earned at Foundling.
Plaintiff maintains that such an offset would undermine the goals of the ADEA in discouraging unlawful age discrimination. According to the plaintiff, an offset in damages would have a lesser deterrent effect on employers who discriminate on the basis of age. Moreover, he argues, an offset based on new earnings might actually discourage ADEA plaintiffs from exercising due diligence in finding new employment. Plaintiff bases his argument on
Sims v. Madame Paulette Dry Cleaners,
Sims
does not command an opposite result in this case. Sims actually worked to earn her higher salary, whereas Munnelly received 14 months of unearned salary as part of his severance package. Munnelly’s severance pay is more analogous to Sims’ unemployment benefits, which the Court did in fact offset from her eventual recovery.
Accordingly, defendant may deduct from Munnelly’s eventual award, if any, the severance pay Munnelly received during the seven months that those payments overlapped with his new job.
Insurance
Plaintiff further seeks $1,076 a month to compensate him for lost life insurance premiums. Defendant claims that plaintiff is not entitled to such damages because he did not actually purchase any new life insurance premiums. Plaintiff argues, however, that he exercised reasonable diligence to purchase comparable insurance. He argues that he did not purchase a new policy only because the policy which most resembled that which he held while employed with Memorial was prohibitively expensive. Defendant contends, however, that because plaintiff did not actually purchase the new insurance, he should not be able to recover the costs of the premium. Defendant further argues that even if this Court were to hold that reasonable efforts to procure insurance could warrant damages, plaintiff would still not be entitled to recovery because the insurance sought provided different benefits than plaintiff’s insurance package from Memorial.
Fringe benefits are available as monetary damages under the ADEA.
See, e.g., Buckley v. Reynolds Metals Co.,
The court went on to suggest that had Fariss earnestly but unsuccessfully sought insurance benefits, he, like a plaintiff who diligently but unsuccessfully seeks substitute employment, could still recover.
Id.
at 965-66;
see Bonura v. Chase Manhattan Bank N.A.,
Defendant contends that even if the Court were to find that a plaintiffs reasonable efforts to purchase insurance are enough to fulfill his “mitigation” requirements, Munnelly’s efforts were not satisfactory. These are issues of fact to be determined by the factfinder. If the jury finds that plaintiff made reasonable efforts to purchase substitute insurance, denying plaintiff recovery for unpaid insurance premiums would be inconsistent with the make whole purpose of the ADEA.
For the reasons stated above, the Court will allow the jury to consider evidence regarding plaintiff’s recovery for his lost insurance premiums.
Conclusion
As set forth above, the Court will admit evidence going to the following measures of damages: (1) an offset of severance payments against any back pay award plaintiff may receive; and (2) evidence of plaintiff’s reasonable efforts to procure an insurance package comparable to that which he received through his previous employer.
The matter shall proceed to trial.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Plaintiff apparently hopes to exploit the similarities some courts have recognized between Title VII and ADEA actions.
Trans World Airlines v. Thurston,
