Fass v. Northwell Healthcare System

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 24, 2025
Docket7:24-cv-00257
StatusUnknown

This text of Fass v. Northwell Healthcare System (Fass v. Northwell Healthcare System) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fass v. Northwell Healthcare System, (S.D.N.Y. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK --------------------------------------------------------------x DR. ARTHUR FASS, : Plaintiff, : : OPINION AND ORDER v. : : 24 CV 257 (VB) NORTHWELL HEALTHCARE SYSTEM, : Defendant. : --------------------------------------------------------------x Briccetti, J.: Plaintiff Dr. Arthur Fass brings this employment discrimination action against defendant Northwell Health, Inc.1 (“Northwell”), alleging Northwell discriminated against him on the basis 0F of his age, in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (“ADEA”) and the New York State Human Rights Law (“NYSHRL”). Now pending is defendant’s motion for summary judgment. (Doc. #19). For the reasons set forth below, the motion is DENIED. The Court has subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1367. BACKGROUND The parties have submitted briefs, statements of material fact pursuant to Local Civil Rule 56.1, and declarations with exhibits. These submissions reflect the following factual background. I. Plaintiff’s Employment Plaintiff, who was 70 years old when he commenced this action, is a trained cardiologist and has practiced medicine in the New York metropolitan area for more than 40 years.

1 In its answer, defendant asserts Northwell Health, Inc., employed plaintiff and that it was improperly sued herein as “Northwell Healthcare System,” as reflected in the caption. (Doc. #8 at 1). Beginning in the 1990s, plaintiff worked at North State Cardiology, a medical practice he co-founded alongside two other cardiologists: Dr. Dina Katz and Dr. Franklin Zimmerman. In 2013, Phelps Hospital (“Phelps”) acquired North State Cardiology. After Phelps’s acquisition of their practice, plaintiff, Dr. Katz, and Dr. Zimmerman accepted individual employment

agreements with Phelps. At that time, plaintiff was approximately 60 years old. Plaintiff’s 2013 employment agreement (the “2013 agreement”) set forth the terms of his employment with Phelps. As relevant here, the agreement included an initial employment term of five years, which would automatically renew for an additional five years at the conclusion of the term unless either Phelps or plaintiff notified the other of an intent not to renew with at least 180 days’ notice. Plaintiff was “pleased” by the offer of a five-year term of employment because “it offer[ed] a degree of security” that Phelps “intend[ed] to keep us for at least a five-year period.” (Doc. #22-2 (“P. Dep.”) at Tr. 67–68). He found the automatic renewal term “important” because it showed Phelps contemplated continuing his employment past the expiration of the 2013 agreement. (Id. at Tr. 72).

The 2013 agreement also included collective performance objectives for plaintiff, Dr. Katz, and Dr. Zimmerman. For example, the trio were expected to achieve 25,000 Work Relative Value Units (“wRVUs”) as a group ever year. wRVUs are a common performance metric linked to billing codes entered by a physician while treating patients. Essentially, the more wRVUs recorded by a physician, the more revenue generated by the medical practice or hospital. In 2015, Phelps was acquired by Northwell, a nonprofit healthcare provider that manages numerous hospitals in the New York metropolitan area. Plaintiff’s employment agreement with Phelps transitioned to Northwell but otherwise continued unchanged until 2017, when plaintiff was appointed Director of Medicine at Phelps. In that position, plaintiff’s responsibilities included administrative work, such as interviewing new physicians and organizing various hospital committees, in addition to his clinical duties. To recognize that change in responsibilities, the parties added an amendment to plaintiff’s employment agreement (the “2017 amendment”) that called for him to devote approximately 20% of his working time to the

administrative responsibilities assigned to the Director of Medicine. Plaintiff’s appointment as Director of Medicine was in line with his excellent reputation at Phelps. Dr. Varinder Singh, Chief of Cardiology at Lenox Hill Hospital and Senior Vice President of Cardiology at Northwell, called plaintiff a “legend” and a “very good doctor” who “took a small community hospital and built a nice program, both in medicine and in cardiology.” (Doc. #22-9 at Tr. 17). In July 2019, the parties entered into another employment agreement (the “2019 agreement”). The 2019 agreement included an employment term of three years. It also stated plaintiff’s employment would “automatically renew . . . for successive terms of one (1) year” unless (i) either Northwell or plaintiff notified the other of an intent not to renew with at least

120 days’ notice or (ii) either party terminated the contract early. (Doc. #22-6 at 1). Again, plaintiff found the multi-year term of employment “important.” (P. Dep. at Tr. 101). The 2019 agreement was signed by plaintiff, Dr. Varinder Singh,2 and Deborah Schiff, the Executive Vice 1F President of Ambulatory Strategy and Business Development at Northwell. In addition, the 2019 agreement reduced the group wRVU expectation for plaintiff, Dr. Katz, and Dr. Zimmerman to 17,400 hours per year and reduced plaintiff’s administrative commitment as Director of Medicine to 10% of his total working time.

2 Because both Dr. Varinder Singh and Dr. Binoy Singh, discussed below, played significant roles in the relevant factual background, the Court will refer to each by his full name to avoid confusion. The parties made two amendments to the 2019 agreement. In March 2021, they agreed to slightly increase plaintiff’s compensation for his Director of Medicine duties. Later that year, they agreed to eliminate the collective wRVU target applicable to plaintiff, Dr. Katz, and Dr. Zimmerman and replace it with an individual target of 5,800 wRVUs per year for plaintiff. Dr.

Varinder Singh signed both amendments on behalf of Northwell. II. Alleged Discrimination Shortly after the parties signed the 2019 agreement, doctors and executives at Northwell began discussing potentially hiring another cardiologist at Phelps. On September 3, 2019, Dr. Zimmerman (plaintiff’s former partner at North State Cardiology) emailed Taylor Hathaway Rossiter, Vice President for Northwell’s Cardiology Service Line, and copied Dr. Varinder Singh, writing that he and Dr. Varinder Singh had “been discussing . . . our desire to recruit a new noninvasive cardiologist for our practice and begin the process of succession planning.” (Doc. #22-10 at 2).3 Dr. Zimmerman explained they “wish[ed] to recruit a new or recently graduated 2F cardiology fellow no later than July of 2020.” (Id.). According to plaintiff, Dr. Zimmerman was “speaking for himself” when discussing succession planning, because plaintiff “was not thinking of retirement at all” in September 2019. (P. Dep. at Tr. 110). Plaintiff agreed that Phelps should hire a new cardiologist in 2019, but only because the practice was “simply too busy”—not because he was contemplating retirement. (Id. at Tr. 112). Plaintiff did not discuss his potential retirement with colleagues at Northwell or Phelps until the late summer and early fall of 2022. Those conversations began after July 1, 2022, when

3 “ECF __” refers to page numbers automatically assigned by the Court’s Electronic Case Filing system. the 2019 agreement automatically renewed and converted to a one-year employment term set to expire on June 20, 2023. Specifically, Northwell executives discussed with plaintiff his “long- term plans” and the prospect of retirement. (P. Dep. at Tr. 115–16). By that time, Dr. Binoy Singh had been appointed Chair of the Cardiology Department at Phelps, and he assumed a

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