Jury Gets Case in Radio DJ Discrimination Trial

After over a week of testimony, the jury began deliberations in the discrimination trial of Wendell "JD" Houston versus his former employer, Hot 93.7 (WZMX).  According to the court docket, the jury began deliberations on Thursday, January 31st and was set to continue with deliberations on Friday, February 1st. No word yet on a verdict, but one can be expected soon.

Those who are familiar with litigation should also understand one particular thing: Decisions by juries are, in many cases, just a stop in the road of litigation. Both sides will, no doubt, consider grounds for an appeal.

Court: SNET's Conversion to Cash Balance Plan Does Not Violate ERISA

First, a warning.

If your eyes glaze over at discussing the difference between cash balance plans and defined benefit plans, this post is not for you.  However, for those employers who are considering converting their retirement plans or who have done so, a new case released this morning provides some much-needed guidance in Connecticut about the legality of doing so, with a well-reasoned opinion to boot.  It also provides a bit of a primer to people who've heard  "something" about retirement plans, but have been curious about what the big deal was with converting from traditional pension plans to newer reitrement plans.

In Custer v. SNET (download here), federal judge Stefan Underhill has upheld SNET's conversion to a cash benefit plan from 1995.  In doing so, he methodically deconstructs the Plaintiff's arguments (while still acknowledging that this area of law is developing).  His discussion on the background on the case -- for those who need a bit of re-education in the area -- is particularly instructive.

First, he discusses the two types of retirement plans.

ERISA’s statutory structure contemplates two types of retirement plans; defined contribution plans and defined benefit plans. 29 U.S.C. §1002(34) - (35). A defined contribution plan is “a pension plan which provide[s] for an individual account for each participant and for benefits based solely upon the amount contributed to the participant’s account, and any income, expenses, gains and losses, and any forfeitures of accounts of other participants which may be allocated to such participant’s account.” 29 U.S.C. § 1002(34). By contrast, “a defined benefit plan is any retirement plan that is not a defined contribution plan.” Id. (citing 29 U.S.C. § 1002(35)). A typical defined benefit plan grants retirees a percentage of their final salary for the remainder of their lives.

Cash balance plans generally share certain attributes with both defined contribution plans and defined benefit plans. Like a traditional defined contribution plan, participants in a cash balance plan accrue benefits in an “account.” Unlike a traditional defined contribution plan, however, a participant’s account in a cash balance plan is not “real;” it is a mathematical construct to determine the size of a plan participant’s lifetime annuity that the employer will pay out when the participant retires. The account is not capitalized in the sense that neither the participant, nor the employer, is actually setting aside money. Instead, the employer is simply accruing an obligation to pay out benefits at a future date.

So, what did SNET do? On July 1, 1995, SNET converted its defined benefit plan to a cash balance plan.

Under SNET’s cash balance plan, each participant’s cash balance account is comprised of three parts: the opening account balance; accrued service credits; and accrued interest credits.The opening balance is generally based on the participants’ benefits under the old plan as of July 1, 1995. Participants then earn service credits at the end of each month based upon their level of pay and years of service.

Finally, participants earn interest credits annually based upon fixed negotiated percentages. ... [Central to this argument is that] if a younger participant remains employed through retirement age, he will thus accrue more total interest per service credit than similarly situated older workers. ...

Perhaps as an incentive to take early retirement, as part of the switching to the new plan, SNET front-loaded some retirement benefits. ... As a practical matter, participants thus receive 110 percent of their benefits under the old plan until the value of the cash account under the new plan catches up to and exceeds their permanent enhanced benefit.

The parties, and other courts, refer to the catch-up period as the “wear-away” period because, plaintiffs argue, the benefits that participants can receive but will not increase during that period. The period is more aptly named a “catch-up” period, however, because it is the period during which employees’ benefits under the cash balance plan catch up to their front-loaded permanent enhanced benefit.

The first question for the court was whether the interest credit portion violates ERISA.  The court said no.  It suggests that cash benefit plans, in general are not age-discriminatory "because cash balance plans are functionally equivalent to defined contribution plans, at least with respect to accruing benefits."  The court then uses various support for its conclusion including :

I similarly hold that the interest credit formula of SNET’s cash balance plan is not actually age-discriminatory, and that it merely accounts for the time value of money. As set forth in greater detail below, an employee’s benefits are not calculated based upon whether that employee is older or younger, but are instead calculated based upon whether he is a newer or more senior employee. The critical determinant of an employee’s benefits are his years to retirement, not his age. The fact that age may often have a loose correlation with an employee’s years to retirement does not necessarily make a plan age-discriminatory. In fact, a cash balance plan would more likely violate ERISA § 204(b)(1)(H)(i) if it did not account for the time value of money.

The court also dismisses the employees' argument that the plan "wears away" at their benefits.

Plaintiffs’ allegation that “an older worker has to wait more years after the conversion to the cash balance formula to actually begin earning new retirement benefits,” however, is not accurate. The “wear-away” period is not necessarily longer for older workers; it is longer for workers that have greater frozen benefits. Under the old plan, the size of a worker’s frozen benefits is a function of a worker’s salary and years of service, not his age....

Because a workers’ frozen benefits are not a function of the worker’s age,the size of the “wear-away effect” is not a function of the worker’s age.  For example, the size of the “wear-away” period for an older worker with a given salary and years of service will not be greater than the length as a younger worker’s “wear-away” period with the same salary and years of service to the company.  Indeed, a participant’s age, as opposed to his salary and years of service, has no impact on the length of the “wear-away” period.  

Moreover, employees are not actually “losing” benefits during the “wear-away” period.  SNET chose to calculate the permanent enhanced benefit by starting with an employee’s account balance under the old defined benefit plan, and increasing the balance immediately by ten percent.  If SNET had chosen to evenly distribute the ten percent increase over the period of time during which the value of an employee’s cash balance account caught up to the permanent enhanced benefit, then an employee’s benefits would not remain stagnant, but would constantly increase (even if at a lower rate than the employee was previously receiving under the old plan).  SNET should not be penalized for front-loading the ten percent increase in benefits, as opposed to spreading that ten percent increase out over a period of years.

As you can see from the above, the issues with conversions are technical and, perhaps cumbersome. But for employers who have converted their plans or who are considering doing so, the case provides a roadmap to avoiding some legal pitfalls in the future.

Employment Discrimination Trial Begins for DJ Fired from Local Radio Station Hot 93.7

In 2003, a local Connecticut radio station, Hot 93.7 (WZMX) fired its prominent DJ - Wendell (JD) Houston.  Five years later, a federal court trial regarding Houston's claims that his termination was due to discrimination have just started.

As with all such matters, the allegations are complicated and contested. Thus, as always, a word of caution to the readers that allegations are not facts.   Both sides are presenting their case now and it will be that evidence that the jury will consider -- not what the parties tell the media.

The Associated Press takes a shot at trying to summarize a five-year old case into several paragraphs in this story, reprinted in the Hartford Courant today.

Ratings soared when WZMX-FM Hot 93.7 switched from "dancing oldies" to an edgier hip hop, but behind the on-air banter racial tensions were rising among the stars at the Farmington radio station.

Wendell "JD" Houston, the show's black host, says a figure depicting the lynching of a black man was left dangling from his microphone and racist posters were hung at the station. He says the station hired him in 2000 under pressure to diversify, but denied him promotional appearances and favored his white co-host when the pair clashed.

"The defendants wanted an Uncle Tom, a black person who would remain behind the radio microphone and be heard but not seen," Houston's attorneys wrote in a federal racial discrimination lawsuit that heads to trial Tuesday in Hartford.

CBS Radio, which owns the station, says Houston has no direct evidence of discrimination and the Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities dismissed a complaint he filed in 2002.

Houston was let go in 2003 after he was accused of cursing at his co-host, sexually harassing another colleague and constantly fighting with his supervisors and others at the station, the station says. They say he sent a note to the woman who accused him of sexual harassment titled "vengeance upon adversaries" that quoted the Bible.

Articles like this, although well meaning, do a disservice to the readers because they are unable to provide readers with the full context of the case.  Evidence that may never be presented to the jury is treated as "fact", which -- as highlighted above -- it is not. 

Thus, as a service and as background to the key points likely to be made by both sides in this trial, I'd suggest first reviewing the papers submitted to the court on a motion for summary judgment.  Infinity Radio's Motion for Summary Judgment is here, Houston's brief opposing it is here, and Infinity Radio's reply is here. Two years after the motion for summary judgment was filed in 2004, the Court denied the motion in a summary order here.  However, its fair to say that both sides will be relying on much of the same evidence at trial and letting a jury decide.

Where things get interesting is actually in the parties' joint trial memorandum filed in the fall of 2006.  Both sides have indicated that they may put on witnesses that are quite clearly in the public eye, including other radio personalities ("DJ Buck""Kid Fresh" and Jeanine Jersey, for example) and community leaders (like former Hartford School Board Chair, Rev. Wayne Carter).

The court records indicate that they were only able to get barely started yesterday on the trial so, according to the parties' own statements, this trial (presided by Judge Alvin Thompson) should last at least another week or two.  Houston is being represented by Frances Miniter and Infinity Radio has brought in Proskauer Rose out of their Boston office.

I won't pretend that I've listened to the station that much -- I'm a bit more attached to XM Radio these days -- but it is not often that radio and television stations make their own headlines.   "Stay tuned" for further developments.

Federal Courts May Not Be As Hostile For Employment Plaintiffs As Some Perceive

Some commentators have argued that the federal courts are increasingly hostile to employees who bring employment discrimination claims in federal court. One study, for example, suggested that plaintiffs simply have too many obstacles to overcome in federal court.

A new study on summary judgment practices by the Federal Judicial Center suggests that such a perception may be off-center.  (The FJC is the education and research agency of the federal courts.)

Paul Mollica of Daily Developments in EEO Law reports on the study:

[The study shows] that 35% of employment discrimination cases culminate in a summary judgment motion. [The study also] reports the bottom-line figure that 9 to 14% of the employment discrimination cases (depending on the district studied) were actually terminated on summary judgment. (One way to square the numbers is that in many instances, the defendant succeeds on dismissing some counts but not others; multiple counts often seek the same relief.)....

 [I]t appears that far more federal employment discrimination cases are ending on favorable terms (either settlement or avoiding summary judgment) [to Plaintiffs] than the anecdotal evidence first suggests....

What does this mean? It means that there are a lot fewer cases getting dismissed at the summary judgment stage (i.e. before trial) then many believed. 

For in-house lawyers advising their clients about summary judgment, the study should serve as a cautionary tale that an early exit in a case before trial may not be realistic.  Summary judgment on the papers of a case remains difficult to achieve in federal court (and even more difficult in Connecticut state court).  This translates into higher litigation costs and the realization that, absent a settlement, an employment case could go to a trial (further increasing the costs).  

(Hat Tip: Workplace Prof)