Deer v. Cherokee County

183 F.R.D. 642, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 199, 78 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1463, 1999 WL 9805
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Iowa
DecidedJanuary 7, 1999
DocketNo. C 97-4056-MWB
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 183 F.R.D. 642 (Deer v. Cherokee County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deer v. Cherokee County, 183 F.R.D. 642, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 199, 78 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1463, 1999 WL 9805 (N.D. Iowa 1999).

Opinion

[644]*644MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER REGARDING MOTIONS IN LIMINE

BENNETT, District Judge.

644 I. INTRODUCTION....................................

II. LEGAL ANALYSIS .................................. 645

A. The “Non-Assistance” Incident...................... 645

B. “After-Acquired Evidence” of Application Misconduct.. 647

C. Availability Of The “After-Acquired Evidence” Defense 648

1. “After-acquired evidence” as an affirmative defense 649

a. McKennon................................ 649

b. What constitutes an affirmative defense?...... 649

i. Rule 8(c) ............................. 649

ii. The “catchall” defenses................. 650

iii. Summary of pertinent factors........... 652

iv. Application of the factors............... 652

2. Leave to assert the defense..................... 653

a. The nexus between Rule 8(c) and Rule 15..... 654

b. Factors pertinent to leave to amend.......... 654

c. Application of the factors ................... 655

III. CONCLUSION..................... 656

This ruling on motions in limine in this lawsuit involving claims of a discriminatory failure to hire and retaliation probes the extent to which evidence of events that occurred after or were only discovered after the defendant’s decision not to hire the plaintiff can nonetheless be admissible at trial. The defendant county seeks to exclude evidence of an incident that occurred more than a year after the plaintiff was not hired as a sheriffs deputy, but the plaintiff contends that evidence is admissible to show continuing retaliation for her complaints of discrimination in the sheriffs department’s hiring process. The plaintiff, in her turn, seeks to exclude evidence from her prior employment records, because she contends those records were not considered by the county at the time it decided not to hire her, but the county contends those records are admissible “after-acquired evidence” of misrepresentations in the plaintiffs job application. Although the court must resolve these evidentiary questions, they have been overshadowed by pleading and trial readiness questions that have arisen as a consequence of the motions in limine. Those questions include whether “after-acquired evidence” is an affirmative defense that must be pleaded and proved by the defendant, and if the defense is an affirmative one, whether the failure to plead it previously in this case is a curable defect.

I. INTRODUCTION

Plaintiff Sharon Red Deer, a Native American woman over the age of forty, filed this action against defendant Cherokee County on July 1, 1997. In her complaint, Red Deer asserts federal and pendent state-law claims of age, race, and sex discrimination and retaliation. More specifically, Red Deer alleges that she was discriminated against on January 28, 1997, and continuing thereafter, when she was denied a position as a sheriffs deputy with the County, and that she was retaliated against on February 28, 1997, and thereafter, for complaining about discrimination. Trial in this matter was set to begin on January 4, 1999. However, following a conference with the parties on December 30, 1998, prompted by issues raised in the final pre-trial order and the motions in limine now before the court, trial has been continued.

This matter comes before the court pursuant to defendant’s “first” motion in limine, filed December 15,1998, and plaintiffs “first” motion in limine, filed December 18, 1998. In its motion in limine, the County seeks to exclude evidence that, more than a year after the two occasions on which Red Deer was denied, employment with the Sheriffs De[645]*645partment, the Cherokee County Communications Center (“911”) allegedly failed to dispatch an officer to assist Red Deer with a dispute that she had encountered at a store where she was working as a security guard. The County contends that if it discriminated or retaliated against Red Deer, it did so long before the “non-assistance” incident. It also contends that Red Deer’s later difficulties in dealing with the Sheriffs Department do not tend to prove that she was a victim of discrimination when she first interviewed for a job over a year earlier or that she was retaliated against when she interviewed a second time, about eleven months earlier. Therefore, the County contends, whatever probative value the evidence of the “non-assistance incident” might have is substantially outweighed by the danger of confusing the jury and unfairly prejudicing the County. Red Deer has resisted the motion on the ground that evidence of the “non-assistance incident” is relevant to show a continuing pattern and practice of discrimination by the County against her when she called for assistance as part of her current job duties.

In her motion in limine, Red Deer has moved to exclude evidence of her past employment records, including Defendant’s Exhibit C, concerning her employment with the East Central Independent School; Exhibit D, concerning her employment with the Douglas County Sheriffs Department; Exhibit E, concerning her employment with the City of Blair; and Exhibit F, concerning her employment with the City of Ogallala. Red Deer contends that this evidence was not obtained by the County prior to its decisions not to hire her, played no part in the County’s decisions not to hire her, and consequently is not relevant or probative of any issues in this case, but is instead an attempt to put her “on trial.” In its resistance to Red Deer’s motion in limine, the County argues that the employment records are admissible “after-acquired evidence” of wrongdoing. The County contends that Red Deer misrepresented the reasons for her departures from two of her previous jobs, and characterizes her termination from one of those jobs as a discharge for “dishonest conduct.” Dishonest conduct, the County points out, is a ground for termination of a deputy sheriff and prior dishonest conduct would have constituted a ground not to hire Red Deer at all. Thus, the County asserts that, had it known about Red Deer’s misrepresentations on her job application at the time of its decision not to hire her, the County would not have hired Red Deer regardless of her race, sex, or age. In a reply brief, Red Deer contends that the employment records should nonetheless be excluded, because nothing in them shows any action on her part rising to the level of “misconduct” that would justify the County in not hiring her.

The court will consider each of these motions in turn, as well as issues concerning pleading and trial readiness that have arisen as a consequence of the court’s legal analysis of evidentiary questions.

II. LEGAL ANALYSIS

A. The “Non-Assistance” Incident

Taking the first motion first, the court finds that the County’s motion to exclude evidence of the “non-assistance” incident must be denied on several grounds.

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Bluebook (online)
183 F.R.D. 642, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 199, 78 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 1463, 1999 WL 9805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deer-v-cherokee-county-iand-1999.