*Cracks knuckles in preparation for lots of cutting and pasting***
âIn employment discrimination claims, Judge Kavanaughâs opinions over the years typically favored the employer.â
Over at Littler, Michael Lotito summarizes many of the labor and employment decisions from Judge Kavanaugh. But, he also underscores how Judge Kavanaugh likes to cut to the chase. For example, thereâs his disdain for the burden-shifting analysis employed in disparate treatment cases:
In a 2008 opinion, he noted that â[j]udicial inquiry into the prima facie case is usually misplaced.â He characterized that inquiry as âa largely unnecessary sideshowâ and announced a simplified approach for disparate-treatment claims. He explained that âwhere an employee has suffered an adverse employment action and an employer has asserted a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for the decision, the district need notâand should notâdecide whether the plaintiff actually made out a prima facie case under McDonnell Douglas.â Instead, trial courts should focus on the more important question of whether the employee can establish that the employerâs rationale is pretext âand that the employer intentionally discriminated against the employee.â
That case is Brady v. Office of Sergeant at Arms (opinion here).
A friend of big business? Or just common sense?
Among the â6 Kavanaugh Employment Cases Lawyers Need To Seeâ (subscription required), Law360âs Vin Gurrieri highlights Southern New England Telephone Co. v. NLRB (opinion here) in which Judge Kavanaugh wrote concluded that the employer did not violate federal labor law by forbidding employees who interacted with customers from wearing union shirts that said âInmateâ on the front and âPrisoner of AT&Tâ on the back. Judge Kavanaugh emphasized that â[c]ommon sense sometimes matters in resolving legal disputes.â
But, thereâs some employee-friendly stuff too. Like a single-incident hostile work environment.
That didnât come out right. Letâs start over.
Rarely is there a situation in which a single act is severe enough to create a hostile work environment.
My buddies Phil Miles (here) and Jon Hyman (here) blogged about Judge Kavanaughâs 2013 concurrence in a race-discrimination case called Ayissi-Etoh v. Fannie Mae (opinion here) in which Judge Kavanaugh âunderscoredâ that a single use of the n-word may create a hostile work environment.
Lateral transfer = retaliation? Could be.
Jackson Lewis published a comprehensive review of Judge Kavanaughâs time on the DC Circuit. Among the highlighted cases is Ortiz-Diaz v. United States HUD (opinion here) in which Judge Kavanaugh asked the DC Circuit to rule that âall discriminatory transfers (and discriminatory denials of requested transfers) are actionable under Title VII.â Judge Kavanaugh further opined that âtransferring an employee because of the employeeâs race (or denying an employeeâs requested transfer because of the employeeâs race) plainly constitutes discriminationâŠâ
Judge Kavanaugh can hit a lay-up.
At the Employment & Labor Insider, another one my employment-law blogging pals, Robin Shea, notes that Judge Kavanaugh affirmed a lower court ruling granting summary judgment for an employer on an employeeâs claims of retaliation. Robin notes that the employee âserved undercooked chicken to a banquet of 250 people. In addition to undercooking food and engaging in unsanitary practices, he also allegedly falsified his time records. He was finally terminated after he cooked and allowed to be served some breaded chicken that had plastic wrap under the breading. (The plastic wrap melted and apparently stuck to the chicken.)â
Ewww.
Administrative agencies like the DOL and EEOC may become less influential.
Reporting for Law360, Jimmy Hoover writes (here â subscription required) that â[c]onfirmation of ⊠Brett Kavanaugh, would spell further trouble for federal agencies and so-called Chevron deferenceâ; i.e., the respect the courts often give to an administrative agencyâs interpretation of ambiguous laws. Mr. Hoover notes that âJudge Kavanaugh has expressed misgivings with the way his colleagues on the D.C. Circuit have applied the doctrineâs two-step process, where judges are first asked to determine whether the statutory language is âambiguous,â and then whether the agencyâs interpretation is a reasonable one.â
What do you think?
From a pure labor and employment law perspective, are you feeling Brett Kavanaugh on the Supreme Court? Email me with your hot take. Iâd love to hear from you.