Keith Shaffer v. Fairdinkum Consulting, LLC, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 5, 2025
Docket1:24-cv-06067
StatusUnknown

This text of Keith Shaffer v. Fairdinkum Consulting, LLC, et al. (Keith Shaffer v. Fairdinkum Consulting, LLC, et al.) 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
Keith Shaffer v. Fairdinkum Consulting, LLC, et al., (S.D.N.Y. 2025).

Opinion

KEITH SHAFFER, 2 ae : “4g {5 [2 S Plaintiff, -against- . 24 Civ. 6067 (CM)(SLC) FAIRDINKUM CONSULTING, LLC, et al., Defendants. ORDER Plaintiff Keith Shaffer brings an action under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, 42 U.S.C. § 12101, et seg. (the “ADA”), the New York State Human Rights Law, NY State Executive Law § 296, ef seg. (the “NYSHRL”), the New York City Human Rights Law, NYC Administrative Code § 8-107, et seg. (the “NYCHRL”), and common law breach of contract against corporate defendants Fairdinkum Consulting, LLC and Fairdinkum Management Holdings LLC (together the “Fairdinkum Defendants’) and individual defendants David Hafke and Michael Lianos (collectively with the Fairdinkum Defendants, the “Defendants”). (Dit, No. 7 (the “Amended Complaint” or “Am. Compl.”) §] 1, 10-18). This action follows Defendants’ alleged discriminatory termination of Plaintiff’s employment, failure to provide Plaintiff with a reasonable accommodation for his disabilities, and failure to provide certain disbursements in connection with Plaintiff’s membership interests in Fairdinkum Management Holdings LLC.

Plaintiff first brought this action on August 9, 2024, (Dkt. No. 1), and filed an Amended Complaint on August 27, 2024, (Dkt. No. 7). Defendant Fairdinkum Management Holdings LLC (the “Company’”’) filed a motion to dismiss the Amended Complaint on November 15, 2024. (Dkt.

No. 18). Defendants Fairdinkum Consulting, LLC, David Hafke, and Michael Lianos filed an Answer to the First Amended Complaint on November 17, 2024 (Dkt. No. 19).

On July 31, 2025 — well after briefing concluded on the Company’s Motion to Dismiss, and long after the January 3, 2025 deadline to amend pleadings or join parties had passed — Plaintiff brought a Motion for Leave to File a Second Amended Complaint. (Dkt. No. 46).

I conclude that Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to File a Second Amended Complaint should be DENIED. Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss, construed as a Motion to Compel Arbitration, is GRANTED with respect to Plaintiff’s fourth cause of action for breach of contract and is otherwise DENIED. Litigation on the Fourth Cause of Action — but only on the Fourth Cause of Action — will be STAYED pending the conclusion of any arbitration.

BACKGROUND

The well-pleaded allegations of the Complaint are accepted as true.

Plaintiff claims that he began his employment with “Defendants” in or around 2005.! (Am. Compl. 4 19). He transitioned to remote work in March 2020 at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. (/d. { 21). At some point during the 2021, Defendants implemented a vaccine mandate. □ (See id. 22). Plaintiff alleges that, in August 2021, he provided Defendants with a doctor’s note, stating that he was being treated for angioedema and acute pericarditis and recommending that he not receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Ud. J 23). Defendants allegedly agreed to this and allowed Plaintiff to continue working remotely. Ud. 4 26). However, Plaintiff alleges that, on or about

' Plaintiff uses “Defendants,” the “Fairdinkum Defendants,” and the individual names of the corporate defendants interchangeably throughout the Complaint, and contends that Fairdinkum Consulting, LLC and Fairdinkum Management Holdings LLC are “‘integrated employers’ as they have common management, share financial control of both companies, share centralized control of labor relations, and share employees.” (Am. Compl. § 12).

December 13, 2021, without raising any issues regarding Plaintiffs performance or his purported inability to perform essential job duties, the Fairdinkum Defendants removed Plaintiff’s accommodation and suspended his employment purportedly “due to what [Fairdinkum] deem[ed] to be [his| inability to perform account manager duties in the strictly remote capacity in which [he] was currently restricted.” Ud. | 27). Plaintiff alleges that Defendants discriminated against his disability through this termination for the following reasons: (i) Plaintiff was able to fully perform his job duties from home; (ii) Defendants refused to explain the specific duties he was unable to perform; and (ii) Defendants failed to work with Plaintiff to determine an alternative accommodation that would have enabled him to continue working in his position. (Id. J] 29-32). Plaintiff does not allege whether Defendants ever demanded that he receive the COVID-19 vaccine in order to lift his suspension. Instead, Plaintiff alleges only that on or about January 13, 2022, Defendant Hafke sent an email terminating his employment. (/d. { 33). Plaintiff alleges, in his first three causes of action, that this constituted disability discrimination under federal, state, and New York City law.

In a fourth cause of action, Plaintiff alleges that, incident to his employment with the Fairdinkum Defendants, he held a 9.722% interest in the Company. Ud. 4 48). He does not specifically identify what agreement entitled him to this interest, nor did he attach or incorporate by reference any such agreement, or quote from any such agreement in the text of his Complaint. He nonetheless alleges that, “As per this agreement . . . each unitholder’s interest in. . . distributions of Defendant Fairdinkum Management was represented by the units owned by such unitholder.” Ud. § 49) (emphasis added). Plaintiff alleges that, between January 13, 2022 and June 7, 2023, the Fairdinkum Defendants failed to make certain distributions to which he was legally entitled pursuant to the unidentified “agreement” Ud. 4 50-51).

Plaintiff also alleges that he “would have been entitled to a deferred loan payment due to having sold certain shares of equity, which was around half of what he owned. Once a certain marker was due to hit, it would trigger repayment of the loan, which, upon information and belief occurred after his employment was terminated.” (/d. § 52). Plaintiff does not plead how much he is owed as a result of Defendants’ alleged failure to pay him monies owed, either the distributions or the deferred loan payment. Instead, he pleads that the “amount he is owed totals, upon information and belief, $73,489.96.” Ud.) While Plaintiff does not identify what contract is at issue in his pleading, Defendants do. There is a contract that entitles Plaintiffto a 9.722% interest in Fairdinkum Management Holdings LLC, and that entitles him, as a member of the LLC, to receive periodic distributions. That agreement is the September 17, 2021 LLC Agreement of Fairdinkum Management Holdings LLC (the “LLC Agreement”), to which Plaintiff is a signatory. (Dkt. No. 18-3, at 18-19). The LLC Agreement identifies the members of the LLC and sets out their proportionate ownership shares in the entity, which “this agreement” is alleged (at Am. Compl. § 49) to do. The LLC Agreement also governs such matters as distributions of cash flow to the LLC’s partners, as well as setting out how a Member could withdraw ~ voluntarily or involuntarily — and how the Company might go out of business and wind up its affairs. The LLC Agreement makes reference to a second agreement, the Operating Agreement, of even date; but while Plaintiff briefly mentions the Operating Agreement in his Complaint, (Am. Compl. § 49), neither party has attached the Operating Agreement to any pleading or moving paper or identified any provision of an Operating Agreement that might be pertinent to the breach of contract alleged in the Complaint.’

? Plaintiff’s reference to an Operating Agreement comes in the “Breach of Contract” section of his First Amended Complaint: “By way of background, incidental to, and by virtue of, Plaintiff's employment with the Fairdinkum Defendants, Plaintiff held equity in Fairdinkum Management totaling 9,722 ‘units of membership interests’ which

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Bluebook (online)
Keith Shaffer v. Fairdinkum Consulting, LLC, et al., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-shaffer-v-fairdinkum-consulting-llc-et-al-nysd-2025.