tucker v. dubois
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Opinion
Vermont Superior Court Filed 01/2 24 Washmgton mt
VERMONT SUPERIOR £3: CIVIL DIVISION COURT f1 Washington Unit Case No. 22-CV-01810 65 State Street Montpelier VT 05602 802-828-2091 WWW.Vermontjudiciary.org
Jill Tucker V. Dubois & King, Inc.
Rulin on Dubois & Kin ’s Motions for Summar Jud ment and a Protective Order and Ms. Tucker’s Motion to Amend the Complaint
In this action, Plaintiff Ms. Jill Tucker alleges that, once she was diagnosed With
cancer, her employer, Defendant Dubois & King, Inc. (D&K), began retaliating against
her by effectively demoting her, marginalizing her in the workplace, treating her
abrasively, and eventually revoking all accommodations and terminating her
employment. In the original complaint, she asserts two claims of disability
discrimination (retaliation and failure to accommodate) and one of age discrimination.
With discovery ongoing, D&K filed a motion for summary judgment arguing that the
undisputed facts show that it tried many ways to accommodate Ms. Tucker, who
eventually quit through no fault of its own. It also filed a motion for a protective order
asking the Court to suspend further discovery until it rules on its motion for summary
judgment, which, at a minimum, would prevent scheduled depositions of D&K
employees.
Ms. Tucker has opposed both motions and filed a motion to amend the complaint.
The proposed amendment adds claims of “wrongful termination by constructive
discharge,” breach of contract, promissory estoppel, and intentional infliction of
emotional distress. The breach of contract and, in the alternative, promissory estoppel
Order Page 1 of 5 22—CV-01810Jill Tucker v. Dubois 8c King, Inc. claims appear to assert that, apart from accommodations warranted by limitations due to
disability, there was some kind of enforceable agreement permitting Ms. Tucker to work
5-hour workdays all from home but for once a week, and that D&K breached that
agreement by revoking it unilaterally and terminating her employment. D&K opposes
any amendment arguing that the new claims are futile, should have been raised long ago
if at all, and were filed in a bad faith effort to keep the case alive after D&K filed its
summary judgment motion.
1. Ms. Tucker’s Motion to Amend
Vt. R. Civ. P. 15(a) provides that leave to amend a complaint shall be freely given
by the court “when justice so requires.” In Vermont, this provision has been liberally
construed in favor of allowing parties to amend their pleadings. Lillicrap v. Martin, 156
Vt. 165, 170 (1991). The purpose is three-prong: (1) to provide the opportunity for each
claim to be decided on the merits rather than on a procedural technicality; (2) to give
notice of the nature of a claim or defense; and (3) to enable a party to assert matters that
were overlooked or unknown at an earlier stage in the proceeding. Colby v. Umbrella,
Inc., 2008 VT 20, ¶4, 184 Vt. 1, 5 (quoting Bevins v. King, 143 Vt. 252, 255 (1983)).
Leave to amend is not always granted, however. It may be denied when the just
and expeditious disposition of the dispute between the parties will not be advanced via
the amendment. In making that determination, the Court analyzes whether the
proposed amendment: (1) would result in undue delay; (2) is brought in bad faith; (3)
would result in unfair prejudice to the opposing party; or (4) would be “futile” in that it
would fail to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, the dismissal standard
under Rule 12(b)(6). Perkins v. Windsor Hosp. Corp., 142 Vt. 305, 313 (1982).
Order Page 2 of 5 22-CV-01810 Jill Tucker v. Dubois & King, Inc. Ms. Tucker’s motion is a very close call. D&K’s argument as to delay has force.
Ms. Tucker’s original complaint was filed in May 2022. In her motion to amend, she
asserts that the proposed claims only became apparent in the course of discovery. She
does not further explain that point. In fact, the proposed claims appear to address events
and issues that should have been fully apparent to Ms. Tucker in real time when they
happened to her, well before she ever filed this case. She offers no justification for
having overlooked these claims until now. Thus, her delay in raising them goes
essentially unexplained.
D&K also argues that the claims, or most of them, are futile. Indeed, as to the
new claims, the allegations of the complaint are somewhat conclusory. As noted,
however, futility under Rule 15(a) is assessed under the Rule 12(b)(6) standard. D&K’s
futility argument does not appear to apply that standard except perhaps with regard to
the wrongful termination claim. Instead, it essentially argues futility based on its view
of the true facts rather than the allegations of the complaint. The Court acknowledges
that the wrongful termination claim is not pleaded with clarity, and it may simply be
duplicative of Ms. Tucker’s discrimination claims. It is not clear, though, that it fails as a
matter of law to state a claim under the stringent test of Rule 12(b)(6). In short, the
Court cannot conclude without a developed factual record that the proposed claims are
futile.
As to prejudice, delay can be its own form of prejudice and unnecessary costs can
be incurred by the opposing party. Otherwise, the prospect is that the parties may need
to redo certain discovery, such as Ms. Tucker’s deposition.
Order Page 3 of 5 22-CV-01810 Jill Tucker v. Dubois & King, Inc. Given the unexplained delay and potential for prejudice, balanced by the strong
policy in favor of addressing claims on their merits, the Court concludes that the just
approach in this case is to grant the motion to amend subject to a condition related to
costs. See 6 Mary Kay Kane, et al., Fed. Prac. & Proc. Civ. § 1486 (3d ed.) (“If the party
opposing the amendment can be protected by the use of conditions from any possible
prejudice that might result from the untimeliness of the amendment, there is no
justifiable reason for not allowing it.”). “The most common condition imposed on an
amending party is costs.” Id. Accordingly, Ms. Tucker’s motion to amend will be granted
subject to the proviso that D&K may file a future request for reasonable discovery
expenses, including attorney fees, if it can establish that they were incurred solely due to
the untimely amendment and the need to engage in wholly redundant discovery.1
2. D&K’s Motion for Summary Judgment
Given the amendment, the Court declines to address the substance of D&K’s
summary judgment motion at this time. The breadth of the new claims clearly overlaps
with the alleged narrative underlying the original three claims, discovery is ongoing, and
the summary judgment record is not well developed. While Ms. Tucker has not expressly
sought relief under Vt. R. Civ. P. 56(d) (when facts are unavailable to the nonmovant),
she has argued, in substance, in opposition to D&K’s motion for a protective order that
allowing discovery to continue will help ensure that she has a fair chance to develop the
evidence as to the matters raised in D&K’s summary judgment motion. The Court is
persuaded that discovery, though not in its earliest stages, has also not concluded. Ms.
Tucker should be afforded some opportunity to develop evidence, particularly in light of
1 To be clear, this condition does not apply to all subsequent discovery costs, only those (hopefully few, if any) that meet the standard noted text.
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