MEMORANDUM OPINION
KAPLAN, District Judge.
Plaintiff, a Caucasian man born in France, brought this employment discrimination action pursuant to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended,
42 U.S.C. §§ 1981-81a, and provisions of state and municipal law. He claimed that he was subjected to a hostile work environment because he was French and that he then was fired for complaining about it. The case was tried, after extensive pretrial proceedings, before me. I found that the claim was utterly baseless, that most of the incidents complained of had not occurred and that plaintiff had greatly exaggerated the few that did, that plaintiff never complained of any alleged harassment, that plaintiff and his friend and principal non-party witness repeatedly lied, and that plaintiff in fact was fired because of his inability to get along with his supervisor, Dr. Sandra Hutchins. The case was dismissed.
The defense of this action cost the defendants over $1.3 million in legal fees and disbursements. They now seek an award of attorneys fees in the amount of $150,000, representing about 55 percent of the trial related costs associated with the work of the two lawyers who primarily defended the action, to “send a strong and important message that severe consequences flow from the type of litigation misconduct in which Franchitti engaged.”
Facts
Franchitti brought this action in 2003.
In 2004, he amended the complaint to add Dr. Hutchins as a defendant. Sixteen depositions were taken, many necessitated by Franchitti’s evasive and equivocal deposition testimony. Defendants moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint. Magistrate Judge Francis—who was obliged to assume the truth of plaintiffs evidence—recommended that the motion be granted in part and denied in part. That recommendation was adopted and defendants’ objections overruled, whereupon the case proceeded to trial, albeit not before briefing and decision on Franchitti’s motion
in limine.
The trial consumed two to three days. Plaintiff testified himself and called most of the defendants’ employees who allegedly were involved in the incidents at question as well as his friend and former Bloom-berg employee, Joanna Gilberti. At the conclusion of plaintiffs case, I granted defendants’ Rule 52(c) motion for judgment on partial findings and dismissed the case. In doing so, I found,
inter alia,
the following:
“[I]t is my deeply held belief that this lawsuit is a trumped up fiction, the object of which is to turn the plaintiffs misfortune at being fired, which finds its origins in his inability to get along with his supervisor, into a profit in an attempt to relieve the quite considerable financial pressure that he has been under for a long time.... I am persuaded that Mr. Franchitti lied repeatedly in this trial, and he did it deliberately and he did it for financial gain. I am persuaded that Ms. Gilberti lied repeatedly in this trial, that she lied in [Franchitti’s] bankruptcy case testimony that she gave, that she lied in both cases. I think there is a reasonable basis for inquiring into the question of whether this case and Ms. Gilberti’s case [Gilberti also is a plaintiff in an employment discrimination suit against Bloomberg in which she is represented by the same attorney] are part of a corrupt scheme between the two of them to extort money from Bloomberg on the basis of imagined wrongs and blatantly false testimony.”
I was critical also of certain testimony offered by Bloomberg. Defendants unsurprisingly and credibly denied that there had been any harassment or anti-French animus. Prior to trial, however, they acknowledged that Dr. Hutchins was the impetus for Franchitti’s termination. Dr. Hutchins supervisor, Mark Jacoby, testified at his deposition that Dr. Hutchins had recommended that Franchitti be fired, that her description of his performance “was the primary driving force” behind the decision, and “that it was Dr. Hutchins’ opinion of [plaintiffs] status that led to his termination.”
At trial, however, Jacoby recanted part of that testimony, saying that he did not recall Dr. Hutchins recommending plaintiffs termination.
Lisa Jennings, the Bloomberg human resources official who made or was involved in the ultimate termination decision, said that Dr. Hutchins never told her that Franchitti should be fired.
I did not credit that testimony,
finding instead the following:
“I don’t have much doubt that Dr. Hutchins ... played a significant role in the fact that the plaintiff was terminated. There is nothing wrong with that. A supervisor in a private entity is entitled to decide to get rid of an employee because of any conceivable reason but for those prohibited by law.
“The reasons that Dr. Hutchins had for wanting to get rid of the plaintiff, whether one agrees with them or not, were entirely lawful. There was no reason why she couldn’t have recommended his termination.
“And, I am persuaded that whether she uttered the words ... that he [should] be terminated or not, nobody at Bloomberg, in a position to make the decision, had the slightest doubt that that was her desire and that she thought it was for the good of the company and they [the decision makers] accommodated her.
“So, for Mr. Jacoby to try to cover that up was really unnecessary. But, quite apart from unnecessary, it wasn’t exactly straightforward....
“It is not material because the real cause, in my estimation, was a perfectly lawful one, and it didn’t have anything to do with what the plaintiff claims here.”
Discussion
Courts are empowered by the Civil Rights Act,
42 U.S.C. § 1988(b), and the New York City Administrative Code
to award attorneys’ fees to a prevailing defendant in cases brought under statutes upon which Franchitti brought this suit. Courts nevertheless must be extremely cautious in using that power to avoid chilling the vital ability of persons who believe that they are victims of discrimination to seek recourse. They must remain acutely aware that claims of discrimination in the workplace often can be difficult to prove, even where discrimination actually has occurred, and that an award of attorneys’ fees to a prevailing defendant in such a case usually will not be warranted.
These considerations underlie the governing standard here. In
Christians-burg Garment Co. v.
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MEMORANDUM OPINION
KAPLAN, District Judge.
Plaintiff, a Caucasian man born in France, brought this employment discrimination action pursuant to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended,
42 U.S.C. §§ 1981-81a, and provisions of state and municipal law. He claimed that he was subjected to a hostile work environment because he was French and that he then was fired for complaining about it. The case was tried, after extensive pretrial proceedings, before me. I found that the claim was utterly baseless, that most of the incidents complained of had not occurred and that plaintiff had greatly exaggerated the few that did, that plaintiff never complained of any alleged harassment, that plaintiff and his friend and principal non-party witness repeatedly lied, and that plaintiff in fact was fired because of his inability to get along with his supervisor, Dr. Sandra Hutchins. The case was dismissed.
The defense of this action cost the defendants over $1.3 million in legal fees and disbursements. They now seek an award of attorneys fees in the amount of $150,000, representing about 55 percent of the trial related costs associated with the work of the two lawyers who primarily defended the action, to “send a strong and important message that severe consequences flow from the type of litigation misconduct in which Franchitti engaged.”
Facts
Franchitti brought this action in 2003.
In 2004, he amended the complaint to add Dr. Hutchins as a defendant. Sixteen depositions were taken, many necessitated by Franchitti’s evasive and equivocal deposition testimony. Defendants moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint. Magistrate Judge Francis—who was obliged to assume the truth of plaintiffs evidence—recommended that the motion be granted in part and denied in part. That recommendation was adopted and defendants’ objections overruled, whereupon the case proceeded to trial, albeit not before briefing and decision on Franchitti’s motion
in limine.
The trial consumed two to three days. Plaintiff testified himself and called most of the defendants’ employees who allegedly were involved in the incidents at question as well as his friend and former Bloom-berg employee, Joanna Gilberti. At the conclusion of plaintiffs case, I granted defendants’ Rule 52(c) motion for judgment on partial findings and dismissed the case. In doing so, I found,
inter alia,
the following:
“[I]t is my deeply held belief that this lawsuit is a trumped up fiction, the object of which is to turn the plaintiffs misfortune at being fired, which finds its origins in his inability to get along with his supervisor, into a profit in an attempt to relieve the quite considerable financial pressure that he has been under for a long time.... I am persuaded that Mr. Franchitti lied repeatedly in this trial, and he did it deliberately and he did it for financial gain. I am persuaded that Ms. Gilberti lied repeatedly in this trial, that she lied in [Franchitti’s] bankruptcy case testimony that she gave, that she lied in both cases. I think there is a reasonable basis for inquiring into the question of whether this case and Ms. Gilberti’s case [Gilberti also is a plaintiff in an employment discrimination suit against Bloomberg in which she is represented by the same attorney] are part of a corrupt scheme between the two of them to extort money from Bloomberg on the basis of imagined wrongs and blatantly false testimony.”
I was critical also of certain testimony offered by Bloomberg. Defendants unsurprisingly and credibly denied that there had been any harassment or anti-French animus. Prior to trial, however, they acknowledged that Dr. Hutchins was the impetus for Franchitti’s termination. Dr. Hutchins supervisor, Mark Jacoby, testified at his deposition that Dr. Hutchins had recommended that Franchitti be fired, that her description of his performance “was the primary driving force” behind the decision, and “that it was Dr. Hutchins’ opinion of [plaintiffs] status that led to his termination.”
At trial, however, Jacoby recanted part of that testimony, saying that he did not recall Dr. Hutchins recommending plaintiffs termination.
Lisa Jennings, the Bloomberg human resources official who made or was involved in the ultimate termination decision, said that Dr. Hutchins never told her that Franchitti should be fired.
I did not credit that testimony,
finding instead the following:
“I don’t have much doubt that Dr. Hutchins ... played a significant role in the fact that the plaintiff was terminated. There is nothing wrong with that. A supervisor in a private entity is entitled to decide to get rid of an employee because of any conceivable reason but for those prohibited by law.
“The reasons that Dr. Hutchins had for wanting to get rid of the plaintiff, whether one agrees with them or not, were entirely lawful. There was no reason why she couldn’t have recommended his termination.
“And, I am persuaded that whether she uttered the words ... that he [should] be terminated or not, nobody at Bloomberg, in a position to make the decision, had the slightest doubt that that was her desire and that she thought it was for the good of the company and they [the decision makers] accommodated her.
“So, for Mr. Jacoby to try to cover that up was really unnecessary. But, quite apart from unnecessary, it wasn’t exactly straightforward....
“It is not material because the real cause, in my estimation, was a perfectly lawful one, and it didn’t have anything to do with what the plaintiff claims here.”
Discussion
Courts are empowered by the Civil Rights Act,
42 U.S.C. § 1988(b), and the New York City Administrative Code
to award attorneys’ fees to a prevailing defendant in cases brought under statutes upon which Franchitti brought this suit. Courts nevertheless must be extremely cautious in using that power to avoid chilling the vital ability of persons who believe that they are victims of discrimination to seek recourse. They must remain acutely aware that claims of discrimination in the workplace often can be difficult to prove, even where discrimination actually has occurred, and that an award of attorneys’ fees to a prevailing defendant in such a case usually will not be warranted.
These considerations underlie the governing standard here. In
Christians-burg Garment Co. v. EEOC,
the Supreme Court held that a district court, in its discretion, may award attorneys’ fees to a prevailing defendant in a Title VII case if the plaintiffs “claim was frivolous, unreasonable, or groundless, or that the plaintiff continued to litigation after it clearly became so.”
While a plaintiffs bad faith is not a prerequisite to an award of attorneys’ fees, its presence provides “an even stronger basis for charging him with attorney’s fees incurred by the defense.”
Franchitti’s claim here was frivolous, unreasonable, groundless, and brought in a bad faith effort to extort money from Bloomberg. This is not a case in which a plaintiff lost because a debatable point of law was resolved against the plaintiff. Nor is it a case in which the evidence permitted a factual determination to go either way, and a jury rendered a verdict that establishes no more than that it was not persuaded of the correctness of a
plaintiffs position by a preponderance of the evidence. It is, rather, one in which I have found that plaintiff made up most of the events about which he testified and materially exaggerated the rest. He did so for a venal purpose. I could not in good conscience fail to find that the
Chñstiansburg
standard is satisfied.
Franchitti nevertheless argues that I should not award attorneys fees or, at least, not as high a figure as defendants seek. His arguments are almost entirely baseless. Nevertheless, I find one persuasive.
Plaintiff argues that a fee award should be denied because the defendants’ denial that Dr. Hutchins recommended Franchitti’s termination also was false or, at least, misleading.
To the extent he uses this fact to suggest that my finding that Franchitti lied and that his claim was bogus was incorrect, the argument is without merit.
It is baseless also to the extent that he argues that his own misconduct should be excused because the other side also was less than straightforward. Nevertheless, an award of attorneys’ fees in a case like this rests in the sound discretion of the trial court. And the Court will
not exercise its discretion in favor of a party that dissembled, as Bloomberg did. While the point on which it was not candid was not the core of the case, the importance of telling the truth in judicial proceedings is just too great.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, defendants’ motion for an award of attorneys’ fees is denied.
SO ORDERED.