New v. M&T Bank Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 30, 2025
Docket1:21-cv-01186
StatusUnknown

This text of New v. M&T Bank Corporation (New v. M&T Bank Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New v. M&T Bank Corporation, (W.D.N.Y. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

ISAIAH THOMAS NEW,

Plaintiff, 21-CV-1186-LJV v. DECISION & ORDER

M&T BANK CORPORATION et al.,

Defendants.

On November 2, 2021, the pro se plaintiff, Isaiah Thomas New, commenced this action for alleged discrimination and retaliation against his former employer, M&T Bank Corporation (“M&T Bank”), and several associated entities and individuals (collectively, the “defendants”). Docket Item 1.1 After New amended his complaint, Docket Item 6, the defendants moved to dismiss the amended complaint, Docket Item 11. New then responded, Docket Item 17, and this Court found that the amended complaint was subject to dismissal but granted New leave to amend, New v. M&T Bank Corporation, 2024 WL 22734 (W.D.N.Y. Jan. 2, 2024). New did not so, instead moving for “expedited discovery.” Docket Item 26. The Court denied that motion but gave New another opportunity to amend the complaint. Docket Item 28. New still did not amend after that order, this time moving for

1 More specifically, New’s complaint named M&T Bank Corporation, Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company, Arthur Salman, and several John Does as defendants. See Docket Item 1. New’s second amended complaint added claims against Francisco Torres but no longer named Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company as a defendant. See Docket Item 34. reconsideration of the order denying expedited discovery or, in the alternative, asking this Court to certify that order for interlocutory appeal. Docket Item 29. The Court denied that motion and ordered New, who by then had been given several extensions of time to amend, to file a second amended complaint no later than August 30, 2024. Docket Item 32 at 3.2

New finally filed his second amended complaint, Docket Item 34, which the defendants moved to dismiss, Docket Item 36. Before responding to that motion, however, New again moved for reconsideration of both this Court’s prior order holding that his first amended complaint was subject to dismissal and its later order denying his motion for expedited discovery. Docket Item 37. In the alternative, New again sought “permission to file an interlocutory appeal.” Id. at 3-4. Separately, New moved for “expedited discovery” yet again, Docket Item 40, which the defendants opposed, Docket Item 42. The Court denied all New’s requests but, in light of his pro se status, gave “him

one more chance” to respond to the defendants’ motion to dismiss the second amended complaint. Docket Item 44 at 7-8. New then moved under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(d) to convert the defendants’ motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment and, once converted, to “[g]rant limited discovery . . . for [him] to oppose [the d]efendants’ motion.” Docket Item 45. The defendants filed a reply in further support of their motion to dismiss, Docket Item 46, arguing, among other things, that if the Court were to consider New’s conversion motion, it should be rejected “as substantively baseless,” id. at 6 (bolding and underlining omitted).

2 Page numbers in docket citations refer to ECF pagination. New then responded to the motion to dismiss his second amended complaint. Docket Item 48. That response was not timely, but because New is proceeding pro se, the Court will consider it. Nevertheless, for the reasons that follow, New’s motion to convert the defendants’ motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment, Docket

Item 45, is DENIED, and the defendants’ motion to dismiss New’s second amended complaint, Docket Item 36, is GRANTED. BACKGROUND3

New is a Black man who “was hired by M&T Bank in 2017 in the bank’s Buffalo, New York headquarters.” Docket Item 34 at ¶ 12. He has “a bachelor’s degree in

3 On a motion to dismiss, the court “accept[s] all factual allegations as true and draw[s] all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff.” Trs. of Upstate N.Y. Eng’rs Pension Fund v. Ivy Asset Mgmt., 843 F.3d 561, 566 (2d Cir. 2016). The following facts are primarily taken from New’s second amended complaint, Docket Item 34. In its prior decision, the Court advised New that “any second amended complaint must include all allegations against each of the defendants so that the second amended complaint stands alone as the only complaint that the defendants must answer in this action.” New v. M&T Bank Corp., 2024 WL 22734, at *7 (W.D.N.Y. Jan. 2, 2024). And the Court also advised New that “an amended complaint is intended to completely replace the prior complaint in the action and . . . ‘renders [any prior complaint] of no legal effect.’” Id. (quoting Int’l Controls Corp. v. Vesco, 556 F.2d 665, 668 (2d Cir. 1977) (alteration in original)). Nevertheless, New’s second amended complaint is significantly shorter than the prior complaint and is missing many of the factual allegations contained in that document. Compare Docket Item 6 at ¶¶ 16-92, with Docket Item 34 at ¶¶ 12-26. In these situations, courts often consider facts alleged in pro se litigants’ prior complaints out of deference to their pro se status. See Briggs v. SCO Family of Serv., 2021 WL 7209010, at *2 (E.D.N.Y. Oct. 20, 2021) (collecting cases). But here, as the defendants correctly observe, New happens to have omitted some of the key facts that the Court considered in its prior decision, see Docket Item 36-3 at 13-14. Moreover, as the Court will discuss below, New now contradicts a fact from the first amended complaint that was central to the Court’s prior decision. economics from an Ivy League University,” and during his time at M&T Bank he worked as a “Management Trainee and Corporate Analyst.” Docket Item 6 at ¶¶ 5, 10. New was “the only [B]lack employee” out of “approximately 75 staff” members on the floor where he worked, id. at ¶ 7, and he was “one of less than eight” Black employees “in

the entire 350-person Finance Division,” id. at ¶ 8. “From the start of his employment, [New] was subjected to severe and pervasive racial harassment by his white colleagues.” Docket Item 34 at ¶ 13. For example, “[i]n one particularly egregious incident,” on the day after Martin Luther King Jr. Day in 2018, “a group of white male employees gathered around [New]’s cubicle and compared Black athletes to slaves being sold at auction.” Id. at ¶ 14. New’s direct supervisor (who is white) also “repeatedly called[,] denigrated[,] and verbally harassed [New] in front of

“In ‘special circumstances,’ [a c]ourt may disregard allegations in an amended complaint to the extent they contradict allegations in prior versions of the complaint.” Christian v. TransPerfect Global, Inc., 2018 WL 4571674, at *2 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 24, 2018). “[T]he more usual and benevolent option,” however, “is to accept the superseded pleadings but allow the factfinder to consider the earlier pleadings as admissions in due course.” Barris v. Hamilton, 1999 WL 311813, at *2 (S.D.N.Y. May 17, 1999). Although the defendants are correct that the Court may take judicial notice of its own orders and the prior pleadings in this action, Docket Item 36-3 at 11, 14 n.1 (citing Rosado-Acha v. Red Bull Gmbh, 2016 WL 3636672, at *7 (S.D.N.Y. June 29, 2016)), the Court is mindful of the fact that New is proceeding pro se and may not have intended to omit (or contradict) facts from his prior pleading. Accordingly, the Court accepts New’s second amended complaint as the operative pleading and occasionally refers to the first amended complaint only to give context to New’s claims.

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New v. M&T Bank Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-v-mt-bank-corporation-nywd-2025.