English v. Texas Farm Bureau Business Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedOctober 15, 2019
Docket6:17-cv-00323
StatusUnknown

This text of English v. Texas Farm Bureau Business Corporation (English v. Texas Farm Bureau Business Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
English v. Texas Farm Bureau Business Corporation, (W.D. Tex. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS WACO DIVISION

HEATHER ENGLISH, JOE HAWLEY, § ROBIN BROUSSARD, § Plaintiffs, § 6:17-CV-00323-ADA § v. § § TEXAS FARM BUREAU BUSINESS § CORPORATION, TEXAS FARM § BUREAU CASUALTY INSURANCE § COMPANY, TEXAS FARM BUREAU § MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, § TEXAS FARM BUREAU § UNDERWRITERS, FARM BUREAU § COUNTY MUTUAL INSURANCE § COMPANY OF TEXAS, SOUTHERN § FARM BUREAU LIFE INSURANCE § COMPANY, TEXAS FARM BUREAU, § Defendants. §

ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR EQUITABLE TOLLING AND TO COMPEL DEFENDANTS TO PRODUCE A FULL CLASS LIST Before the Court is Plaintiffs Heather English, Joe Hawley, and Robin Broussard’s (“Plaintiffs”) Motion for Equitable Tolling and to Compel Defendants to Produce a Full Class List (“Motion”). ECF No. 136. The Court held a hearing on August 28, 2019, to consider the Motion and subsequent briefing. ECF Nos. 138, 139, 143, 152, 153. For the following reasons, the Motion is DENIED. I. BACKGROUND On March 29, 2019, this Court granted Plaintiffs Motion to Certify Class as an FLSA Collective Action and for Court-Authorized Notice. ECF No. 111. That order, among other things, conditionally certified the following class: All former and current independent contractors of Texas Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company, Texas Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company, Texas Farm Bureau Underwriters, Farm Bureau County Mutual Insurance Company of Texas, Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company, and Texas Farm Bureau, who within the past three years have worked in the position of insurance agent in the State of Texas. Id. at 19. The Order did not specify the reference point from which the “past three years” would be determined. Although this Court acknowledged in the Order that Plaintiffs sought a class list that reached back three years from the date of the complaint, it did not authorize a class using the language proposed by Plaintiffs in the original or live complaints, which sought a class list of insurance agents classified as independent contractors “between November 17, 2014 and the present.” Compare id. with ECF Nos. 1 ¶ 78; 39 ¶ 101. Instead, the Order adopted the vague language in the motion for conditional certification. See ECF No. 68 at 2–3. Defendants produced a class list on April 12, 2019, that included putative class members dating back three years from the Court’s order. See ECF No. 115 ¶ 7. Plaintiffs sent out court-

authorized notice on April 22, 2019, based on the information provided in that list. ECF No. 117. Plaintiffs filed this Motion over two months after the notice was distributed, and after the close of the notice period, seeking an expanded list of potential class members. Plaintiffs claim the delay was a result, at least in part, of Defendants’ omission of the start and end dates of the putative class members or other disclosure of the time-period that the class list covered. Motion at 3. Defendants dispute that allegation and respond that the cover letter enclosing the class list and a subsequent phone call between the parties made clear that the list covered the three years prior to the Court’s order. ECF No. 153 at 1–2 (referencing ECF No. 138 at Ex. A-1). During the August 28, 2019 hearing on the Motion, the Court directed Plaintiffs to identify in the briefing for conditional certification any clear language indicating the class list

should include putative members reaching back three years from complaint rather than the Court’s order certifying the class. ECF No. 150 at 55–56 (“Tr. at _”). Plaintiffs filed a letter on September 4, 2019, reporting that nothing in the conditional certification briefing explicitly requested a class that extends back three years from the complaint. ECF No. 152. In addition to a class list reaching back three years from the complaint, Plaintiffs ask this Court to equitably toll the statue of limitations for two distinct periods: the time between the filing and the resolution of (1) the motions to dismiss; and (2) the motion for conditional

certification. Motion at 5. Plaintiffs suggest equitable tolling is proper to prevent opt-ins from losing compensable time that they would otherwise be denied as a result of Defendants’ motion practice. Id. Defendants respond that standard motion practice is not an external obstacle warranting equitable tolling, and that such relief would effectively give Plaintiffs a “second notice period.” Response at 3, 7 (emphasis in original). Further, Defendants contend nothing prevented Plaintiffs from filing for conditional certification while Defendants’ motions were pending. See id. at 4–6. II. DISCUSSION A. Plaintiffs’ Have Not Demonstrated the Class List Should Reach Back Three Years from the Date of the Complaint The Court directed Plaintiffs to identify any clear language in their conditional certification briefing that indicated they sought a class list reaching back three years from complaint rather than the Court’s March 29, 2019 order. Tr. at 55–56. The Court stated that, in the absence of such a statement, it would be unlikely to require Defendants to produce a class list including putative class members from three years before the date of the complaint. Id. In accordance with the Court’s request, Plaintiffs filed a letter stating the following:

The briefing does not state that the class should go back three years from the filing of the complaint. The briefing also does not state that the class should go back three years from the Court’s order. Without question, Plaintiffs briefing on this issue was unclear. ECF No. 152 at 1; see also ECF No. 139 (Plaintiffs admit “Without question, Plaintiffs could have been clearer in their proposed class language.”). Additionally, Plaintiffs’ decision to change the proposed class definition from those employed “between November 17, 2014 and the present” to “the past three years,” while apparently not purposeful in retrospect, could have been viewed as an intentional change at the time—and at the very least, introduced vagueness when

the Court adopted the latter language. The Court embraces the more natural reading of “the past three years” to begin at the date of the order granting conditional certification rather than a date in the past not referenced explicitly in the operative motion. This is consistent with other courts in this District and the Fifth Circuit, which routinely approve a three-year lookback from the date of the order certifying the class or the date the notices are sent to the putative class. See, e.g., Frazier v. Dallas/Fort Worth Int’l Airport Bd., 285 F. Supp. 3d 969, 975 (N.D. Tex. 2018) (authorizing notice to putative class members working for employer within the past three years from the date of conditional certification); Snively v. Peak Pressure Control, LLC, 174 F. Supp. 3d 953, 963

(W.D. Tex. 2016) (holding that “the three-year limitations period under the FLSA should be measured from the date notice is issued, rather than the date Plaintiff’s Complaint was filed.”); Lawton v. Osado Water Transfer Co., LLC, No. MO:15-CV-00189-RAJ, 2016 WL 11586134, at *2 (W.D. Tex. Sept. 27, 2016) (same); Diaz v. Applied Mach. Corp., No. CV H-15-1282, 2016 WL 3568087, at *10 (S.D. Tex. June 24, 2016) (“[C]lass certification is appropriately limited to workers employed by defendants up to three years before this court approves the notice.”) (favorably referencing Tolentino v. C & J Spec-Rent Servs. Inc., 716 F. Supp. 2d 642, 654 (S.D. Tex. 2010)).

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Bluebook (online)
English v. Texas Farm Bureau Business Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/english-v-texas-farm-bureau-business-corporation-txwd-2019.