Rigoberto Torres v. New High Tech Car Wash & Lube, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 8, 2023
Docket2:17-cv-05425
StatusUnknown

This text of Rigoberto Torres v. New High Tech Car Wash & Lube, Inc. (Rigoberto Torres v. New High Tech Car Wash & Lube, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rigoberto Torres v. New High Tech Car Wash & Lube, Inc., (E.D.N.Y. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK -------------------------------------------------------------------X ANGEL RIGOBERTO TORRES,

Plaintiff, 17-CV-5425 (SIL) -against-

NEW HIGH TECH CAR WASH & LUBE, INC. MEMORANDUM OF and DAVID BARAM, as an individual, DECISION AND ORDER

Defendants. -------------------------------------------------------------------X STEVEN I. LOCKE, United States Magistrate Judge:

The following constitutes the Court’s Fed. R. Civ. P. 52 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law in this age discrimination case brought pursuant to the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. § 621, et seq. and New York State Human Rights Law (“NYSHRL”), N.Y. Exec. L. § 290, et seq. after a bench trial conducted on January 23 and 24, 2023. I. FINDINGS OF FACT In 1997, Plaintiff, Angel Rigoberto Torres (“Torres”), at age 51, was hired by Defendant New High Tech Car Wash & Lube, Inc. in Garden City, New York (“High Tech”) on an at will basis as an “oil changer,” performing oil changes and replacing transmissions, a job he held until his termination in July 2016 at age 71. See Complaint, DE [1]; Answer, DE [13] (admitting to certain relevant facts); Trial Transcript, DEs [72-1], [72-2] (“TT”) 14, 59-61; Deposition Transcript of Angel Rigoberto Torres, Oct. 4, 2018, DE [72-3] (“DT”) 11, 13-14, 38.1 The job did not require

1 The parties stipulated at trial that the party deposition transcripts would be admitted as evidence. See TT 70. any customer interaction, which was appropriate as Torres speaks no English. TT 62-63; DT 6, 9, 32. Plaintiff earned between $480 and $550 per week. TT 43. Throughout his employment, High Tech was owned and operated by Defendant

David Baram (“Baram”), who also had authority over personnel and to hire and fire and set payroll. TT 157-60. High Tech had between 25 and 35 employees, at least one of whom was employed at the adjoining car wash, Samuel Ayala, and was older than Plaintiff. TT 14, 62, 160-61, 179-80. When Torres was first hired, he had problems with his manager, but this changed when he was moved to a different area. TT 12. He started at six days a

week, which went to five days a week several years later. TT 12-13. In 2014 or 2015, a new 35 or 36-year-old manager Frank Mejia (“Mejia”) was hired. TT 15, 17. Mejia was responsible for supervising all of the employees, including Plaintiff. TT 16. At first, Torres’s relationship with Mejia was good, but it worsened over time due to performance issues. TT 16, 27. Initially, Mejia told Plaintiff that customers were complaining about his (Torres’s) work. TT at 18-19, 114; DT 64.2 Mejia would get “frustrated” if there was

anything wrong with a car and “get mad” at Plaintiff, sometimes leading to verbal exchanges or disputes, and Mejia was constantly upset because Torres was not servicing cars quickly enough. TT 76-78, 82 (“Q. So you agree with me, Mr. Torres, that you had verbal disputes and disagreements and that you fought with Frank

2 Although Plaintiff challenges whether these complaints were actually made because no customers complained directly to him, see TT at 18-19, the Court gives this little weight as Plaintiff admitted that the protocol was that the manager took the complaints and then spoke with the offending employee(s). TT 24, 110-11, 113. Meija every once in a while, correct?” [overruled objection] “A. Yes.”), 94, 131-32. Moreover, on one occasion Plaintiff damaged a corvette that cost Defendants $1,450 to repair, and prior to that he damaged a jeep, costing Defendants $400. TT 166-67.

In addition, Torres was intoxicated at work on more than one occasion. TT 167-68. Although Plaintiff initially denied having a drinking problem during the time he worked for Defendants, TT 66, he modified his testimony to state that he was never drunk at work, TT 73, after being confronted with his deposition testimony where he admitted to drinking too much. DT 22 (“Q. Would you say that you were drinking too much up until four to five months ago [mid-2018 after his termination]? A. Yes.”). In

fact, consistent with this problem, Plaintiff was convicted in 2001 of attacking his son-in-law with a knife while he was intoxicated. DT 16, 18, 20-21. Torres was sufficiently drunk during this incident that he does not recall what happened, but he learned afterwards that his son-in-law had to be taken to the hospital. DT 21. In any event, Defendants’ testimony on this point was credible, while Plaintiff’s was not. Also, at some unidentified point in time, Torres admits that he was having problems with his vision, eventually requiring surgery, which caused him to slow

down at work, such that he could not keep up with the volume, resulting in criticism that he should be working faster. TT 30, 90-92. Torres also conceded that “there were . . . complicated jobs that had to be done that due to [his] age it was hard for [him] to do,” and this “ was stressful” for him. TT 92-93. According to Torres, this led to his complaints about inadequate lighting at his workspace which Mejia was slow to fix, such that Torres occasionally bought lamps himself. TT at 31-32.3 These performance problems were not what caused Plaintiff’s termination,

however. Rather, on the discharge day, Baram, who is older than Plaintiff, responded to a ruckus he heard at the oil change. TT 173-74. When he arrived, three different employees told him (Baram) that Plaintiff had thrown a bunch of tools at Mejia and came at Mejia with a knife. TT 173-76, 200, 204-05. This is the reason Plaintiff was fired. TT 215 (“I fired him because he pulled a knife.”), 218 (Q. “So you decided it would be Mr. Torres that has to go because of the complaints that were coupled with

this? A. No. I decided to let him go because he pulled a knife.”), 219. During this incident Baram noticed that Torres smelled of alcohol and sent him home immediately. TT 174, 177, 183; DT 38.4 In making these findings of fact, the Court acknowledges and rejects as incredible Plaintiff’s uncorroborated testimony that he was the subject of constant agist remarks. By way of example, Torres testified that the first time Mejia relayed a customer complaint about work he did on a car, Torres denied it, and Mejia replied

“[Y]ou are too old. You are too old.” TT 20; see TT 27 (after about six months on the

3 On cross-examination, Baram testified that Defendants did not keep written records of Plaintiff’s performance issues. TT 185. The Court finds that this lack of performance documentation to be irrelevant. Initially, the Court accepts Baram’s testimony that the business kept no performance records for any of its employees. This alone does not cause the Court to reject otherwise creditworthy testimony. More significantly however, as explained below, these performance issues were not the reason for Plaintiff’s termination. 4 Although Plaintiff denies bringing a knife to work and tried to undermine Baram’s trial testimony by pointing out that Baram never called the police as the result of the incident, the Court credits Baram, who was credible at trial throughout his testimony, and accepts his explanation that he did not want to see Plaintiff, a 20-year employee, prosecuted. TT 225. job Mejia would tell Plaintiff he was “too old”), 29 (“You are too old. You are retired already. You are retired.”), 33. He also claimed that other unnamed coworkers made similar comments because “[t]hey wanted to get [Plaintiff’s] job” despite that there

was no evidence that indicated Torres’s job was more desirable than any other. TT 27-28, 35.

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Rigoberto Torres v. New High Tech Car Wash & Lube, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rigoberto-torres-v-new-high-tech-car-wash-lube-inc-nyed-2023.