Su v. Sarene Services, Inc. et.al.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedApril 9, 2025
Docket2:20-cv-03273
StatusUnknown

This text of Su v. Sarene Services, Inc. et.al. (Su v. Sarene Services, Inc. et.al.) 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
Su v. Sarene Services, Inc. et.al., (E.D.N.Y. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

Lori Chavez-DeRemer, Secretary of Labor, United States Department of Labor,

Plaintiff, 2:20-cv-3273 -v- (NJC) (ST)

Sarene Services, Inc. d/b/a Serene Home Nursing Agency; Irene Manolias, Individually,

Defendants. MEMORANDUM & ORDER NUSRAT J. CHOUDHURY, United States District Judge: The Secretary of the United States Department of Labor (“Secretary”) brings this action under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (“FLSA”) against Defendants Sarene Services, Inc. (“Sarene”), a company that provides home health aide services, and Irene Manolias, the company’s owner (collectively “Defendants”). The Secretary brings claims to enforce the FLSA’s overtime, recordkeeping, and anti-retaliation provisions, 29 U.S.C. §§ 206, 207, 211(c), 215(a)(2), 215(a)(3), 215(a)(5), 216, 217, on behalf of more than 500 workers whom Defendants formerly employed as home health aides—workers known as “live-in” aides because they worked 24-hour shifts in the homes of Sarene patients. Several weeks prior to the commencement of trial, on March 15, 2025, this Court entered an Order to Show Cause requiring the parties to show cause in writing by March 20, 2025 as to why 30 hours of trial time is not a reasonable amount of time for each side to present evidence at trial, absent extraordinary circumstances. (Order Show Cause, ECF No. 223.) The parties provided responses and further argued their positions in multiple pre-trial conferences. (ECF Nos. 229–230; Min. Entry, Mar. 14, 2025; Min. Entry, Mar. 25, 2025; Min. Entry, Mar. 28, 2025.) On March 28, 2025, the Court imposed a trial time limit of 33 hours per side, absent unforeseen circumstances, in light of the parties’ written submissions and representations

concerning the scope and estimated time needed for witness examination and cross-examination and the Court’s review of the record and rulings on the parties’ motions in limine and motions to limit or preclude expert evidence. (Min. Entry, Mar. 28, 2025.) This Memorandum & Order provides further reasoning for the Court’s imposition of a trial time limit of 33 hours per side, absent unforeseen circumstances. BACKGROUND On December 13, 2025, the parties filed an Initial Proposed Joint Pre-trial Order (“Initial JPTO”) requesting 30 days for trial in this action. (Initial JPTO at 5, ECF No. 182.) The Secretary requested 10 trial days for the presentation of evidence. (Id.) Defendants estimated they would need “at least twenty” trial days for their presentation of evidence, but also asserted they could not “fully estimate the number of days required for their presentation of evidence in

their defense in light of the fact that” the Secretary had not yet “disclosed the number of witnesses she proposes to use.” (Id.) On the same day the parties filed the Initial JPTO, they also filed eighteen motions in limine. (ECF Nos. 181, 184) At that time, the parties’ dueling motions to exclude expert evidence were fully briefed and pending. (ECF Nos. 165, 167–68, 172–74, 177–78, 188.) On February 7, 2025, the Court held a hearing at which it ruled on more than a dozen of the eighteen pending motions in limine. (Min. Entry, Feb. 7, 2025.) On March 8, 2024, the Court granted the Acting Secretary’s Motion to Exclude Defendants’ Expert, Adam E. Block, PhD and granted in part and denied in part Defendants’ Motion to Preclude the Expert Report and Testimony of the Acting Secretary’s Expert, Jennifer M. Reckrey, MD. (ECF No. 217.) On March 12, 2025, the Court ordered the parties to file a revised proposed joint pre-trial order by March 18, 2025 to reflect the Court’s rulings precluding the parties from offering certain evidence and witnesses at trial. (Elec. Order, Mar. 12, 2025.)

At the March 14, 2025 pre-trial conference, the Court notified the parties that it would impose reasonable limits on the length of trial, which was scheduled to commence with jury selection in two weeks, on April 1, 2025. (Min. Entry, Mar. 14, 2025.) The Court explained that following the parties’ submission of the Initial JPTO, the Court’s rulings on the parties’ motions in limine and motions to exclude expert evidence had narrowed the evidence to be offered and the number of anticipated witnesses at trial. (Id.) The Court noted that, of the witnesses disclosed in the Initial JPTO, eleven witnesses were precluded from testifying at trial, including Defendants’ proposed expert, Adam Block, and that Secretary’s expert, Dr. Jennifer Reckrey, was also precluded from offering a number of opinions. (Id.) The Court also noted that the parties were precluded from offering voluminous evidence at trial, including but not limited to

voluminous evidence about New York’s managed long-term care system, its procedures, and guidelines, and the assignment of patients to different levels of care, which the Court had deemed inadmissible under Rules 402 and 403 of the Federal Rules of Evidence. (Id.) Finally, the Court addressed that, since the filing of the parties’ Initial JPTO, in accordance with the Court’s deadline, the Secretary had disclosed the identities of the worker witnesses whom the Secretary would offer to testify at trial. (Id.) At the conference, the Court asked the parties for revised estimates for the number of trial days needed based on the Court’s rulings. (Id.) The Secretary maintained that 10 trial days were needed to present her case. (Id.) Defendants reduced their earlier estimate of 20 trial days to 10 trial days. (Id.) The Court noted that 20 trial days seemed unnecessary and that, based on the Court’s review of the record, 35 hours per side was likely sufficient. Following the March 14, 2025 pre-trial conference, the Court carefully considered the question of reasonable trial time limits in light of:

(1) the Court’s preclusion of a significant volume of evidence identified in the Initial JPTO through subsequent rulings on the parties’ motions in limine and motions to exclude expert evidence, including numerous opinions of the Secretary’s expert, Dr. Jennifer Reckrey, Defendants’ proposed expert witness, Adam Block, ten fact witnesses proposed by Defendants, and evidence concerning New York’s managed long-term care system, Defendants’ compliance with the law and good character, and other issues (see Min. Entry, Feb. 7, 2025; ECF Nos. 212, 217); (2) the Court’s close review of the parties’ Initial Joint Pre-Trial Order, which the parties were in the process of revising to reflect the significant narrowing of evidence and witnesses to be offered at trial by the Court’s February 7, 2025 rulings on the parties’ motions in limine and March 8, 2025 rulings on the parties’ motions to exclude expert evidence (see Initial JPTO; Min. Entry, Feb. 7, 2025; ECF Nos. 212, 217); (3) the parties’ answers to the Court’s questions concerning the scope of witness testimony during pre-trial conferences and at the Daubert hearing (see Min. Entry, Feb. 7, 2025; Min. Entry, Feb. 11, 2025; Min. Entry, Mar. 14, 2025); (4) the Court’s review of the full transcripts of deposition testimony taken during discovery on the Secretary’s FLSA retaliation claim (see ECF No. 134); (5) the Court’s review of evidence cited in the parties’ numerous briefs, letters, and exhibits regarding the parties’ motions in limine and motions to exclude expert evidence, as well as the Court’s rulings on these motions, which involved review of additional portions of deposition transcripts and trial exhibits not cited by the parties in their briefing (see ECF Nos.

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