Platero v. Grand Hyatt

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 30, 2024
Docket1:22-cv-08680
StatusUnknown

This text of Platero v. Grand Hyatt (Platero v. Grand Hyatt) 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
Platero v. Grand Hyatt, (S.D.N.Y. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

TRACY PLATERO, ET AL., Plaintiffs, 22 Civ. 8680 (PAE) ~ OPINION & ORDER GRAND HYATT,

Defendant.

PAUL A. ENGELMAYER, District Judge: This decision resolves competing motions to confirm and to vacate an arbitral award. Plaintiffs are former banquet servers (the “Banquet Servers”) employed at the defendant Grand Hyatt Hotel in midtown Manhattan (the “Hotel”) and members of the New York Hotel and Motel Trades Council, AFL-CIO (the “Union”). Plaintiffs commenced this action against the Hotel and the Union under Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act (“LMRA”), 29 U.S.C. § 185. They have moved to vacate an April 20, 2023 arbitral award (the “Award”) in the Hotel’s favor, which resolved the number of severance days to which those Banquet Servers who ceased employment at the Hotel during its COVID-19 closure are entitled. The Hotel has cross-moved to confirm the Award. For the following reasons, the Court grants the motion to confirm and denies the motion to vacate the Award. J. Background A. The Banquet Servers’ Classification Under the Industry Wide Agreement The Hotel, located adjacent to Grand Central Station, employed more than 60 banquet servers—18 of whom are the plaintiffs in this case. Dkt. 23 (“Bokerman Decl.”) J 5-6. Because the Banquet Servers were members of the Union, the Industry Wide Agreement

(“TWA”) governed the terms and conditions of their employment. Jd. 43. The [WA is the collective bargaining agreement between the Union and the Hotel Association of New York City, Inc. (“Hotel Association”). Dkt. 26 (“Ruocco Decl.”) { 4; Dkt. 16 (“Kaiser Decl.”), Ex. H (“IWA”). The Hotel, a member of the Hotel Association, is a signatory to the IWA. Ruocco Decl. 75. The IWA classifies banquet servers as “tipped” employees. IWA at 76. Typically, tipped employees derive a substantial portion of their income from customer tips. Ruocco Decl. 4110. As such, tipped employees are generally paid a lower hourly wage than non-tipped employees. A banquet server’s status as a “tipped employee” affects how the IWA calculates the pay rate when a banquet server takes paid time off (e.g., holiday, vacation, sick, and personal days)—what is often referred to in the hotel industry as “benefit days.” Jd. §] 10-11. Under the IWA, when a non-tipped employee takes a “benefit day,” he or she is paid a regular daily rate of

pay; whereas a tipped employee is paid double the daily rate of pay for the benefit day to account for the loss of tips from not working. fd. J 11. Unlike other tipped employees, banquet servers do not get paid a consistent hourly wage. Instead, they are paid by the function they work. Jd. 413. Thus, to calculate a banquet server’s benefit day pay rate, the [WA provides that the Hotel use an a la carte server’s hourly rate. [WA at 42-43. Thus, the Hotel calculates a banquet server’s benefit day pay rate by taking the a la carte server’s hourly rate of pay ($19.435), doubling that hourly rate ($38.87), and multiplying that amount by eight hours ($310.96). Jd. 4} 10-13. B. The Hotel’s Contemplated Redevelopment Project In 2019, the Hotel contemplated selling the hotel to a third party “so that it may be demolished to develop a new mixed-use project with a hotel, office, and a retail portion.”

Kaiser Decl., Ex, C (“02/01/2019 Agr.”) at 2. In anticipation of this project (the “Redevelopment Project” or “Project”), on February 1, 2019, the Hotel and the Union entered into a redevelopment agreement (“Redevelopment Agreement”), in which the Hotel agreed that if it proceeded with the Project, it would serve formal notice to the Union and offer hotel employees “Enhanced Severance Pay.” Jd. To date, the Hotel has not provided the Union with a notice of closing. Def. Mem. at 7. Thus, the obligation to offer Enhanced Severance Pay under the Redevelopment Agreement has not been triggered. C, The Banquet Servers’ 2019 Lawsuit Against this factual backdrop, the Banquet Servers initiated two actions—a 2019 action and the present action—against the Hotel and the Union. The Court reviews the 2019 action here, because the terms of the settlement agreement (the “Settlement Agreement”) that resolved it are central to the present action. On July 19, 2019, the Banquet Servers sued the Hotel and the Union, alleging that they conspired to fraudulently deprive the Banquet Servers of compensation owed under the [WA. Kaiser Decl., Ex. A. In October 2019, the parties entered into a written Settlement Agreement, and the lawsuit, on motion of the Banquet Servers, was dismissed with prejudice. Jd., Ex. B. (“10/2019 Agr.”).! Pertinent here, the Settlement Agreement provided as to severance pay: The Hotel shall offer enhanced severance pay to all employees, including Banquet Servers, in accordance with the agreement, dated February I, 2019 [ie., the Redevelopment Agreement], by and between the Grant Hyatt New York and the New York Hotel and Motel Trades Council, AFL-CIO, which includes the requirement to sign a general release. Id. at 7 (Paragraph 4) (emphasis added).

' The record of this proceeding does not disclose why no party moved to compel arbitration of that action as provided by Article 26 of the IWA. See IWA at 35-36.

The Settlement Agreement thus defined its severance pay calculation with reference to the “Redevelopment Agreement” between the Hotel and the Union dated February 1, 2019. 02/01/2019 Agr. at 2. The Redevelopment Agreement provides that it “shall become effective” if the Hotel decides to sell “the existing hotel to a third party so that it may be demolished to develop a new mixed-use project with a hotel, office, and a retail portion (the “Project”’).” Jd. It also provides that, ifthe Hotel proceeds with the Project, the Hotel must “provide notice to the Union that the Hotel is closing due to demolition.” Jd. Upon such notice, Hotel employees may “elect to receive Enhanced Severance Pay and cease employment immediately.” fd.” (cleaned up). Paragraph 2(a) defines Enhanced Severance Pay as “IWA Article 52 severance pay plus an additional amount equal to twenty-six (26) days of pay for each year of service, for a total of thirty (30) days of pay for each year of service.” Jd. And Paragraph 2(g) provides: “All tipped employees shall get paid twice the aforementioned number of days of Enhanced Severance Pay calculated in accordance with the formula in IWA Article 52.” Id. at 4. (emphasis added). Article 52 of the WA, referenced in the Redevelopment Agreement, provides: For the purpose of calculating severance pay, the EMPLOYER shall pay over to the UNION for distribution by the UNION to the employees affected an amount equal to four (4) days of regular wages for each year of service for each affected employee provided the employee was employed for not less than six (6) months’ service. Tip employees shall receive twice the amount of severance pay calculated in accordance with the above formula. IWA at 58.

? As noted above, it is undisputed that the Hotel has not provided the Union with a notice of closing so as to trigger the offer of 30 days of Enhanced Severance Pay under the Redevelopment Agreement. Dkt. 28 at 7.

The Settlement Agreement also contained a mandatory arbitration provision, requiring that any dispute or matter “be submitted to the Office of the Impartial Chairperson for final and binding resolution in accordance with the WA.” 10/2019 Agr. at 4. D. The COVID-19 Pandemic and the 2022 Side Agreement In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic struck New York City’s hotel industry, requiring the Hotel to temporarily close. The Hotel’s food and beverage operations, including the Banquet Department, remained closed from the pandemic’s onset until at least August 2022, Dkt. 27 (“Grosso Decl.”) at 3.

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Platero v. Grand Hyatt, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/platero-v-grand-hyatt-nysd-2024.