Lead Opinion
Appellants Patricia J. Davis, Patricia A. Duncan, and Davis’s son, Jeffrey J. Goer-gen, brought suit against Opportunity Education Foundation (OEF) and Hugo Enterprises, LLC (Hugo) under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Nebraska Fair Employment Practices Act (NFEPA), alleging sexual harassment and retaliation. Davis and Duncan also sued Joe Ricketts, the Chief Executive Officer of OEF and owner of Hugo, for tortious interference with their expеctation of continued employment. The district court
I.
We recite the facts in the light most favorable to the appellants, the nonmoving parties. Dovenmuehler v. St. Cloud Hosp.,
The Appellants were all employed by OEF in different capacities. In 2009, Davis and Duncan complained internally that OEF’s Chief Operating Officer was sexually harassing them. Both Davis and Duncan were thereafter terminated. About a year later, Goergen was also terminated. Davis and Duncan filed suit, asserting that OEF and Hugo subjected them to a hostile work environment and quid pro quo sexual harassment in violation of Title VII, retaliated against them by perpetuating the hоstile work environment and by firing them in violation of Title VII and the NFEPA, and retaliated against Davis by terminating Goergen in violation of Title VII and the NFEPA. They also asserted that Ricketts violated Nebraska common law by tortiously interfering with Davis’s and Duncan’s expectation of continued employment.
OEF, Hugo, and Ricketts moved to dismiss the Complaint. The district court granted the motion in part, finding that Davis and Duncan had failed to state a claim against Ricketts because the allegations against him were “conclusory and ‘a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action,’ ” Davis and Duncan did not show that a claim could be brought against the employer’s CEO, and the action would undermine precedent holding that supervisors are not individually liable under Title VII.
The Appellants then filed their First Amended Complaint, adding Goergen as a plaintiff and including him on the retaliation claims. At the conclusion of discovery, Hugo and OEF filed a motion for summary judgment as to the remaining claims under Title VII and the NFEPA. The district court granted the motion, holding that the undisputed facts demonstrated OEF at all times had fewer than 15 employees and that OEF and Hugo were not a joint, consolidated, or integrated employer. Thus, their employees could not be grouped for the purposes of the numerosity requirements in Title VII and the NFEPA. The Appellants appeal.
II.
The Appellants argue that the district court erred in granting summary judgment to Hugo and OEF because the entities are integrated and in dismissing their claim against Ricketts because they stated a plausible claim that he tortiously interfered with their business relationships. Because we find that the undisputed facts in the record show that OEF and Hugo are not an integrated enterprise and because we agree with the district court that Ricketts, as CEO of OEF and acting on behalf of OEF cannot be a third party interferer, we affirm the district court.
A. Integrated Enterprise
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Holland v. Sam’s Club,
An integrated enterprise is “one in which the operations of two or more employers are considered so intertwined that they can be considered the single employer of the charging party.” EEOC Compliance Manual § 2-III(B)(l)(a)(iii); see also Baker v. Stuart Broad. Co.,
The interrelation of operations factor examines whether the two entities share managers and personnel, payroll, insurance programs, office space, and equipment. Sandoval,
Hugo provides administrative services to OEF because OEF does not have an administrative infrastructure. For example, Hugo provides accounts payable, accounts receivable, payroll administration, benefits coordination, and some legal and human resources services to OEF. In Brown, that the parent company processed payroll and other services for the subsidiary-employer was found insufficient to overcome the strong presumption of corporate separateness.
“The degree to which the entities share common management includes whether the same individuals manage or supervise the different entities or whether the entities have common officers and boards of directors.” Sandoval,
The entities’ labor relations are largely separate. OEF sets its own employment policies, work schedules, and salaries and is responsible for hiring an'd firing its own employees. OEF employees are paid by OEF, not by Hugo. Hugo is likewise responsible for hiring, firing, and disciplining its employees. Hugo also controls the job functions and responsibilities of its employees. Unlike the entities in Sandoval, where the parent exercised “significant control, through the involvement or oversight of [the subsidiary’s] personnel,” id. (internal quotation marks omitted), the Appellants allege little more than a vague “centralized plan” to fire them that involved persons at Hugo in an attempt to link Hugo to OEF’s labor relations and the alleged discriminatory actions. However, those persons from Hugo also had various roles on the boаrd of OEF. The Appellants fail to demonstrate or allege that these persons, specifically Ricketts who fired them, were acting in a Hugo capacity when making any employment decisions involving them.
OEF does not have its own human resources department, in fact, Ricketts testified that “[he is] the HR department at Opportunity Education.” Mark Simmons, employed by Ricketts personally, serves as Ricketts’ Chief of Staff and also manages various labor relations administrative functions for Ricketts’ companies, including OEF and Hugo. His responsibilities include managing employee health benefits, administering payroll, and maintaining personnel files. When Appellants reported their problems at OEF, they contacted Alan Barkely, employed by OEF as Executive Director. Though Ricketts is involved in the labor rеlations of both entities, the record reflects that the entity responsible for making final decisions regarding employment matters related to the Appellants was OEF.
“The degree of common ownership or financial control asks whether one company owns the majority or all shares of the other and if the entities share common
Although the Appellants produced evidence establishing common control and financial backing, this is insufficient to establish single employer status and overcome the strong presumption of organizational separateness which is necessary to find that they were so integrated that they were, in effect, one entity. The record evidences some, but little, interrelation of operations between the two companies and little if any shared control of labor relations. Artis,
Because we agree with the district court that Hugo and OEF are not sufficiently integrated enterprises to combine their employees to meet the statutory numerosity requirement, the Appellants’ Title VTI and NFEPA claims cannot survive and we affirm the grant of summary judgment.
B. Tortious Interference
We review de novo a dismissal under Federal Rule of Civil Procеdure 12(b)(6). Bell v. Pfizer, Inc.,
In Huff, the Nebraska Supreme Court held that a supervisor or other coemployee could become a “third person” acting as an interferer and subject to liability for tor-
Here, Ricketts is not a mere employee or even a supervisor or manager. Instead, he is the CEO of OEF. Under Nebraska law, for a CEO to be held liable for tortious interference with business relations, there must be, at the pleading stage, some allegation that the action was taken for “his or her own personal benefit,” or for the benefit of an “entity other than the employer.” Id. Taking the pleadings as true, the Appellants fail to plead facts from which a reasonable inference could be drawn that Ricketts’ actions were not taken on behalf of OEF. Even if his actions were taken out of ill-will, he was still acting in his capacity as CEO, and there is no claim for tortious interference here. We note that plaintiffs in a similar position are not without remedy, as “the [corporation’s agent’s] actions are those of the corporation; the employee’s dispute is with the company employer for breach of contract, not the agent individually for a tort.” Id. at 467 (citing Nordling v. Northern States Power Co.,
III.
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to OEF and Hugo and the dismissal of the tortious interference claim against Rick-etts.
Notes
. The Honorable Laurie Smith Camp, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the District of Nebraska.
. ADP TotalSource, Inc. was also a named defendant in the original Complaint. The parties later filed a joint stipulation and motion to dismiss ADP TotalSource as a defendant, and the court dismissed ADP Total-Source.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I would reverse the grant of summary judgment on the appellаnts’ retaliation claims because, viewing the record in the light most favorable to the appellants, there are genuine factual disputes underpinning the legal question whether OEF and Hugo are integrated employers.
My fundamental concern is that the district court in this case made the same mistake that earned the Fifth Circuit a summary reversal earlier this year: the court “failed to adherе to the axiom that in ruling on a motion for summary judgment, ‘[t]he evidence of the non[-]movant is to be believed, and all justifiable inferences are to be drawn in his favor.’ ” Tolan v. Cotton, 572 U.S. -, -,
According to the appellants’ reasonable view of the record, Hugo employees performed most of OEF’s routine human resources functions, had sole authority to write OEF’s checks, directed OEF’s hiring and firing of employees, controlled OEF’s payroll, kept a single integrated employee database for both OEF and Hugo, managed integrated insurance for Hugo and
To be sure, if a jury rejected the appellants’ view of the evidence, the majority’s legal decision that OEF and Hugo are not integrated would carry thе day. But “a judge’s function at summary judgment is not to weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter but to determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial.” Tolan, 572 U.S. at-,
The allegations in this case are significant. If the appellants’ claims are true, two female employees were subjected to persistent sexual harassment by a boorish individual and then summarily fired because they complained about the harassment. I believe there plainly is enough evidence to send this case to a jury.
I join Part II.B of the court’s opinion and otherwise respectfully dissent.
