Deslandes v. McDonald's USA, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 25, 2018
Docket1:17-cv-04857
StatusUnknown

This text of Deslandes v. McDonald's USA, LLC (Deslandes v. McDonald's USA, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deslandes v. McDonald's USA, LLC, (N.D. Ill. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

LEINANI DESLANDES, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) No. 17 C 4857 ) v. ) ) Judge Jorge L. Alonso McDONALD’S USA, LLC, ) McDONALD’S CORPORATION, and ) DOES 1 through 10, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER After a no-hire agreement prevented plaintiff from obtaining a position with a rival employer, plaintiff Leinani Deslandes (“Deslandes”) filed suit asserting, among other things, that defendants’ no-hire agreement violates the Sherman Antitrust Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. Defendants McDonald’s USA, LLC and McDonald’s Corporation move to dismiss. For the reasons set forth below, the Court grants in part and denies in part defendants’ motion to dismiss [34]. I. BACKGROUND Plaintiff’s story is one of employment success: she started as an entry-level crew member paid $7.00 per hour at a McDonald’s franchise and worked her way up into management. When she applied for a better-paying position with a competing McDonald’s restaurant, she was foiled by a no-hire agreement which forbid the competing McDonald’s restaurant to hire both current employees of other McDonald’s restaurants and anyone who had worked for a competing McDonald’s restaurant in the last six months. Given that most individuals in the low-skill employment market do not have the luxury of being unemployed by choice for six months, the no-hire provision effectively prevented competing McDonald’s franchises (as well as the company-owned stores) from competing for experienced, low-skill employees. The following facts are from plaintiff’s complaint and are taken as true. Defendant McDonald’s USA, LLC is a wholly-owned subsidiary of defendant McDonald’s Corporation. Plaintiff generally refers to them collectively as “McDonald’s.” The

ubiquitous purveyor of hamburgers serves 68,000,000 customers per day from some 36,000 outlets around the world. According to plaintiff’s complaint, nearly two million people work for McDonald’s or its franchisees. Many McDonald’s-brand restaurants are owned and operated by McDonald’s Operating Companies (“McOpCos”), which are direct or indirect subsidiaries of McDonald’s Corporation. McDonald’s also franchises McDonald’s-brand restaurants. Thus, many McDonald’s-brand restaurants are independently owned and operated by franchisees. McDonald’s receives revenue from the franchisees in the form of rent, royalties and fees. McDonald’s restaurants compete with one another. Franchisees are not granted exclusive rights or territories and are specifically warned that they may face competition from other

franchisees, new franchisees and restaurants owned by McOpCos. Thus, restaurants owned by McOpCos compete directly with McDonald’s franchisees (who, in turn, compete with each other) to sell hamburgers and fries to customers. When franchising restaurants, McDonald’s enters a standard franchise agreement with its franchisees.1 Because the agreement is standard, franchisees know the basic contents of each other’s agreements. Generally, each franchise agreement lasts for twenty years. In addition to a franchise fee, franchisees agree to pay McDonald’s a percentage of gross revenue. McDonald’s

1 Plaintiff alleges that McDonald’s Corporation is the franchisor for franchise agreements signed before 2005 and that McDonald’s USA, LLC is the franchisor for franchise agreements signed from 2005 to the present. has an incentive to promote revenue growth in its franchisees’ restaurants and encourages competition between franchisees for food sales. Under the standard franchise agreement, each franchisee is an independent business responsible for the operation of its particular McDonald’s-brand restaurant. Under the

agreement, franchisees are required to purchase supplies from approved suppliers. They can, however, seek approval of new suppliers, and they negotiate directly with the suppliers as to purchasing terms, such as price. Franchisees, as independent business owners, are also responsible for the day-to-day operations of their respective restaurants and for, among other things, employment matters. Franchisees make their own decisions with respect to hiring, firing, wages and promotions. The standard franchise agreement specifically states that franchisees are not agents of McDonald’s and that McDonald’s is not a joint employer with respect to the franchisees’ employees. Although franchisees make most of their employment decisions independently, their hiring decisions are restricted in one respect by the standard franchise agreement. The standard

agreement that was used until some point in 2017 contained a no-hire provision. Specifically, the relevant provision stated: Interference With Employment Relations of Others. During the term of this Franchise, Franchisee shall not employ or seek to employ any person who is at the time employed by McDonald’s, any of its subsidiaries, or by any person who is at the time operating a McDonald’s restaurant or otherwise induce, directly or indirectly, such person to leave such employment. This paragraph [] shall not be violated if such person has left the employ of any of the foregoing parties for a period in excess of six (6) months.

(Am. Complt. ¶ 87). Although McDonald’s stopped including the no-hire provision in new franchise agreements at some point in 2017, the provision remains in the franchise agreements applicable to some 13,000 currently-operating McDonald’s-brand restaurants. McDonald’s has applied the same restraint to hiring by the McOpCos. Franchisees ignore the no-hire provision at their peril. A breach of the no-hire provision gives McDonald’s the right not to consent to a transfer of the franchise. With repeated breaches,

McDonald’s has the right to terminate the franchise. Plaintiff alleges that the provision promoted collusion among franchisees, because each knew the other had signed an agreement with the same provision. Plaintiff alleges that the no-hire provision is against each franchisee’s individual interest, because it denies each franchisee opportunities to hire the best employees. Plaintiff also alleges that, so long as the other franchisees also refrain from poaching employees, the no-hire provision helps franchisees keep costs low by allowing them to pay below-market wages to their own employees. Although franchisees are generally responsible for their own employment decisions (so far as they do not violate the no-hire agreement, anyway), many McDonald’s-brand restaurants are staffed in similar ways. Many stores have managers with varying titles, such as swing

manager, assistant manager and store manager. Assistant and store managers are responsible for such tasks as payroll processing, time-sheet updating, tracking supplies and orders and training entry-level employees. McDonald’s requires franchisees to enroll present and future managers in training programs at McDonald’s training centers. The cost of the training is borne by the franchisees. A McDonald’s franchise in Florida (“Bam-B”) first hired plaintiff in 2009. Plaintiff started as an entry-level employee earning $7.00 per hour, and, within three months, plaintiff had earned a promotion to shift manager, with a wage bump to $10.00 per hour. By 2011, plaintiff was a Department Manager for Guest Services, earning $12.00 per hour. At that point, plaintiff began coursework to become eligible for a position as General Manager. Plaintiff’s employer enrolled her in a week-long training course at McDonald’s Hamburger University. The training was scheduled to take place in April 2015, but plaintiff’s supervisors canceled her training when they learned plaintiff was pregnant.2

Fed up, plaintiff decided to put her skills to work elsewhere.

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Deslandes v. McDonald's USA, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deslandes-v-mcdonalds-usa-llc-ilnd-2018.