Kendra Rightsell v. Concentric Healthcare Solutions LLC, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedOctober 14, 2025
Docket2:19-cv-04713
StatusUnknown

This text of Kendra Rightsell v. Concentric Healthcare Solutions LLC, et al. (Kendra Rightsell v. Concentric Healthcare Solutions LLC, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kendra Rightsell v. Concentric Healthcare Solutions LLC, et al., (D. Ariz. 2025).

Opinion

1 WO 2 3 4 5 6 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA

9 Kendra Rightsell, No. CV-19-04713-PHX-GMS

10 Plaintiff, ORDER FURTHER AMENDING AMENDED JUDGMENT (DOC. 248) 11 v. AND ATTORNEYS’ FEES AWARD (DOC. 216). 12 Concentric Healthcare Solutions LLC, et al.,

13 Defendants.

15 Pending before the Court are the five issues on which the Ninth Circuit reversed and 16 remanded this case for the further consideration of this Court: (1) The application of a 17 13.0% fringe benefit rate as opposed to a 13.2% fringe benefit rate; (2) The application of 18 a 1.5% discount rate to past-due wages; (3) consideration whether it is appropriate to apply 19 compound interest to the calculation of prejudgment interest; (4) This Court’s failure to 20 address Rightsell’s requests to purge her personnel records; and (5) the reconsideration of 21 the attorney’s fees award after resolving the above issues. 22 The first two of the issues have been resolved by the parties’ agreement that, if the 23 Court awards simple interest pre-judgment, an additional $15,365.10 should be awarded as 24 of the original judgment date, September 29, 2023, and, if the Court awards compound 25 interest pre-judgment, that Plaintiff should be awarded $17,358.72 as of that date.1 The 26 Court thus turns to the remaining three issues. 27

28 1 The amount is awardable from pre-judgment interest on the appropriate fringe benefit rate without applying a discount rate to past-due wages pre-judgment. 1 1. Compounding Pre-Judgment Interest. 2 The first issue on remand is not whether prejudgment interest should be awarded, 3 which the Court already did, but whether the Court should have either ordered or provided 4 that the pre-judgment interest be compounded in its judgment. 5 On remand, although Plaintiff acknowledges that she never directly asked the Court to 6 compound pre-judgment interest, she asserts that she nevertheless adequately raised the 7 issue by citing to a statute which covers post-judgment interest and by including her 8 expert’s graphs which incorporated such prejudgment compounding:

9 28 U.S.C. 1691(b) talks about interest shall be compounded annually, and 10 that was what we put in our calculation that we submitted in our written closing argument and that’s the table at 186-1. It is based on a compound 11 interest rate and that’s the formula. So, did we specifically say we want 12 compound interest? No. We cited the statute that says were entitled to compound interest, we believe, and put forth the formula how its calculated. 13 Doc. 222 at 24. 14 To the extent the Plaintiff asserts that the statute entitles her to compounded pre- 15 judgment interest she is wrong, although a court in its discretion may refer to the statute in 16 making such determinations. Nevertheless, the statute covers a whole range of issues 17 pertaining to post-judgment as opposed to pre-judgment interest. Plaintiff’s post-trial brief 18 is concerned with the statute’s calculation of the rate. In Plaintiff’s post-trial brief the entire 19 topic of prejudgment interest is dealt with in a single sentence which states “[p]rejudgment 20 interest is also appropriate under 29 U.S.C. § 2617(a)(1)(A) and is calculated pursuant to 21 post-judgment interest under 28 U.S.C. § 1961.” Plaintiff’s post-trial brief then cites three 22 cases all of which dealt with the calculation of the statutory rate of prejudgment interest, 23 by using the statutory post-judgment rate, but none of those cases dealt with compounding. 24 See, Atwood v. PCC Structurals, Inc., 3:14-CV-00021-HZ, 2015 WL 94800024 at *3-4 (D. 25 Or. Dec. 28, 2015) (“Generally, the interest rate prescribed for post-judgment interest under 26 28 U.S.C § 1961 is appropriate for fixing the rate of pre-judgment interest unless the trial 27 judge finds, on substantial evidence, that the equities of that particular case require a 28 different rate.”); White v. Oxarc, Inc., No. 1:19-CV-00485-CWD, 2022 WL 17668781, at 1 *19-20 (D. Idaho Dec. 13, 2022), appeal dismissed, No., 23-35032, 2023 Wl 2947441 (9th 2 Cir. Mar. 21, 2023) (“Under the FMLA an award of prejudgment interest is mandatory.”); 3 Eichenberger v. Falcon Air Exp. Inc., No. CV-14-00168-PHX-DGC, 2015 WL 3999142 4 at *9 (D Ariz. July 1, 2015) (rate calculated by statute). In awarding Plaintiff pre-judgment 5 interest at the amount of 5.33% per annum, the Court awarded Plaintiff pre-judgment 6 interest at the statutory rate that she requested. (Doc. 193 at 6). 7 The tables prepared by Plaintiff’s expert pre-calculated amounts that the Court should 8 award including complete backpay and front pay to continue for many years if the Court 9 accepted all of Plaintiff’s claimed damages. The calculations underlying the tables 10 apparently took into account a number of issues, such as adjustments for pay increases over 11 time, deductions for replacement work, discount rates to be applied to some elements but 12 not others, interest rates, and compounding annual interest. But the tables themselves did 13 not reflect in any comprehensible way, what was done to arrive at the figures and why, 14 although Plaintiff has a different view. Further, the tables themselves were not useful to 15 the Court where the Court determined that Plaintiff was entitled to some, but not all of the 16 backpay she requested, and was entitled to none of the front pay. Plaintiff doubtless in 17 good faith, provided the Court with spreadsheets with Plaintiff’s assumptions pre-loaded 18 so the Court could still have made adjustments to the amounts, but the Court was not 19 comfortable with what assumptions may have been preloaded into the program. Even had 20 the Court used the tables for some purposes nothing about those tables intelligibly informed 21 the Court that Plaintiff’s expert was compounding pre-judgment interest on the awards. 22 Nor, in determining what issues the Plaintiff has raised to the Court, can the Court be 23 expected to reverse engineer Plaintiff’s logic or method in constructing its tables. As has 24 been observed elsewhere “judges are not like pigs, hunting for truffles in briefs. Nor are 25 they archaeologists searching for treasure. Put simply, the court is not obligated to paw 26 over files … in order to make a party’s claim. . . . [I]t is not the responsibility of the 27 judiciary to sift through scattered papers in order to manufacture arguments for the parties.” 28 Krause v. Nevada Mut. Ins. Co., 2014 WL 99178 at *2 (D. Nev. 2014). 1 Although had the issue been intelligibly raised, the Court would likely have awarded 2 compound prejudgment interest, the Court, under the present circumstances where the issue 3 was not intelligibly raised to the Court before the award, declines to do so. Thus, the Court 4 awards an additional $15,365.10 as of the original judgment date, September 29, 2023. 5 2. Purging Plaintiff’s Personnel Records 6 While the Plaintiff may have on other occasions mentioned Plaintiff’s personnel 7 records at trial, the only testimony the Court recalls was testimony from Concentric’s HR 8 Director to the effect that when Andy Jacobs was employed at Concentric he maintained 9 all of the employee personnel files. The testimony was that, after Mr. Jacobs’s departure 10 from the company, and still during the discovery phase of this case, such records 11 concerning Ms. Rightsell were searched for, but could not be found. It was speculated 12 that such files may have been discarded during an office move.

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Bluebook (online)
Kendra Rightsell v. Concentric Healthcare Solutions LLC, et al., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kendra-rightsell-v-concentric-healthcare-solutions-llc-et-al-azd-2025.