laintiffs
in workplace lawsuits are in the midst of a long losing streak in the federal courts
that some legal experts attribute to the Bush administration’s practice of placing
conservative judges on the bench. A recent study shows a 37
percent drop in employment discrimination cases from 1999 through fiscal year 2007.
A worker prevails in a jury trial 29 percent of the time. At a judge trial it’s
20 percent.
If a victorious verdict is appealed, there is a 41.1 percent
chance that it will be reversed. A verdict in favor of employers is overturned only
8.7 percent of the time. That gap is the largest in any case category in the federal
courts, according to Stewart Schwab, dean of the Cornell University Law School.
Schwab and Kevin Clermont, a professor of law at Cornell,
conducted the study of workplace discrimination cases in every district and appellate
court for the fiscal years of 1979 to 2007. Their work was published in the winter
2009 issue of Harvard Law & Policy Review.
The study was released at a September 18 event at the National
Press Club in Washington. It also was one of the subjects of a subsequent Senate
Judiciary Committee hearing.
The number of employment suits peaked at 23,722 in 1998 and
then dropped to 18,859 by 2005. Schwab argues that the downward trajectory is not
a reflection of diminishing bias in the workplace, but the result of workers being
discouraged about their chances of success in federal court.
By contrast, his study shows that the number of charges filed
at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission totaled 80,680 in fiscal year 1997
and 82,792 in fiscal year 2007.
The reason that plaintiffs fare so poorly in the federal courts
is that judges put greater demands on plaintiffs, according to Schwab. Appellate-level
judges view juries as being pro-plaintiff and, therefore, are more inclined to overturn
their verdicts, he says.
The problem has been caused by the appointment of conservative
ideological judges by President Bush, according to some advocates. He has placed
315 of 820 judges on the federal bench. Only 44 vacancies remain nationwide.
"The significant effect of the Bush judges is to advance a
pro-business agenda at the expense of American workers," says Wade Henderson, president
and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights.
The trend of appointing judges with right-wing views started
during the Reagan administration, says Nathaniel Jones, a former judge on the 6th
Circuit Court of Appeals.
"The assault upon civil rights remedies that has led to the
decline in employment cases was by design," Jones says. "It was not accidental."
Cyrus Mehri, a partner at Mehri & Skalet in Washington, says
that plaintiffs’ lack of success does not make sense, because only the strongest
cases go forward to trial.
Employees are "very loyal to their companies and only as a
last resort do they seek counsel," Mehri says.
When even the most highly vetted complaints fail at such a
high rate, "it imperils our civil justice system," Mehri says.
But Eric Dreiband, a partner at Jones Day in Washington and
a former EEOC general counsel, provides a more benign explanation for why the number
of employment cases has fallen: The EEOC has expanded efforts to settle suits before
litigation is necessary.
Between 1999 and 2007, the EEOC sent 98,000 cases to mediation
and resolved 68,000 successfully, Dreiband says. In 2007, the agency recovered $290
million for plaintiffs without going to court.
Workers may be turning their attention away from discrimination
cases and focusing on wage and hour litigation, which has expanded dramatically
in the past few years, employer-side attorneys say. These often become class-action
cases.
This area of the law has grown in popularity because a 10-minute
discrepancy on a time card, multiplied over thousands of employees and multiple
years, can result in lucrative payouts, says Doug Seaton, a partner at Seaton Beck
Peters in Minneapolis.
"The plaintiffs take advantage of quirks in the law to gin
up lawsuits out of tiny intervals of time that no employee or employer would care
about," says Seaton, a member of the Worklaw Network.
Wage and hour claims are the fastest-growing cases in the
federal courts, according to Seaton.
"The idea that there are villainous employers out there trying
to find ways to chisel employees is mistaken," he says. "Every employer is violating
the wage and hour statute because it is so archaic and complicated."
It’s not the wage and hour actions, however, that have drawn
the most attention in recent years. Plaintiff advocates have excoriated conservatives
on the Supreme Court for a 2006 decision against Lilly Ledbetter, a former supervisor
at a Goodyear Tire & Rubber plant in Alabama.
The court held that Ledbetter, who alleged that she had been
paid less than her male counterparts for nearly 20 years, did not have a valid suit
because she didn’t file her action within 180 days of the original discriminatory
action.
Ledbetter argues that she didn’t know what her colleagues
were making until someone slipped an anonymous note in her mailbox at work, many
years after she had started receiving paychecks smaller than those of her male co-workers.
A bill approved by the House but stalled in the Senate would
set the statute of limitations at 180 days from each paycheck. Opponents say that
the measure is a sop to trial lawyers and would force employers to defend stale
cases.
Although the Supreme Court under Chief Justice John G. Roberts
Jr. has ruled in favor of employees in several retaliation cases, the Ledbetter
result is often highlighted by liberal court watchers to assert that conservative
judges are bad for workers.
The court majority in Ledbetter demonstrated a "failure to
understand the American workplace," Mehri says. Supporters of the decision say the
court was respecting statutory guidelines.
The nonpartisan way to remedy the ideological bent on the
bench is to cast the net more widely when nominating judges, according to Mehri.
The emphasis should be on appointing people with diverse backgrounds who are familiar
with the daily challenges most people face.
"There is an out-of-touch jurisprudence because [judges’]
life experiences are so narrow," Mehri says.
Submitting a new slate of judges starts at the White House.
"The presidential election will determine the future of the federal courts for perhaps
generations to come," Henderson says.
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