Wilkerson v. Martin Marietta Corp.

171 F.R.D. 273, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5356, 1997 WL 189813
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedApril 14, 1997
DocketCivil Action Nos. 91-D-2078 (Consolidated with 92-D-969, 92-D-1557, 93-D-130, 93-D-385, 93-D-396, 93-D-1501, 94-D-1247, 95-D-1316)
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 171 F.R.D. 273 (Wilkerson v. Martin Marietta Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkerson v. Martin Marietta Corp., 171 F.R.D. 273, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5356, 1997 WL 189813 (D. Colo. 1997).

Opinion

ORDER APPROVING CONSENT DECREE

DANIEL, Judge

THIS MATTER is before the Court in connection with the Consent Decree entered into between the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“the EEOC”) and Martin Marietta Corporation, now known as Lockheed Martin Company (“MMC”) (collectively “the Parties”). A hearing regarding the fairness, reasonableness and adequacy of the Consent Decree was held March 5, 1997, where the Court heard argument from the Parties and testimony from persons who voiced objections to the proposed Consent Decree. This Order explains the findings and reasons which support my conclusion that the Consent Décree is fair, adequate and reasonable.

I. BACKGROUND OF THE CASE

This case arose out of charges of age discrimination that were filed during the substantial layoffs at MMC’s Astronautics Group (MMAG) from 1990 through 1994. The Parties agree that there was an overall reduction from 11,000 employees in 1990 (excluding employees under union contract who have not been the subject of the litigation) to approximately 6,000 by the end of 1993 at the Denver facilities of MMAG. The reductions impacted employees of all ages, labor grades and job assignments. Of the employees who were laid off, 180 filed charges of age discrimination and 112 opted in as plaintiffs in private lawsuits (some of whom were among the 180 charging parties).

The EEOC alleges that it began receiving charges in 1990 from MMC employees age 40 and over alleging that MMC was engaged in discrimination. Although the EEOC issued “no cause” determinations on some individual charges of age discrimination involving layoffs between 1990 and 1992, additional charges were filed with the EEOC in increasing numbers during the remaining years of the layoffs. In response to these charges, MMC denied that it had discriminated. The EEOC started to investigate the possibility of a pattern and practice of discrimination in late 1991.1 In response, MMC protested the collective investigation and maintained that the charges were individual discrimination claims and should be processed as individual charges.

On December 11, 1992, the EEOC issued an administrative subpoena identifying a number of Charging Parties and requesting production of a broad scope of MMC records that would form the basis of a statistical analysis of the layoffs. Although there were disagreements between MMC and the EEOC regarding the scope of the data request, MMC ultimately produced the data on the demographics of the layoffs for 1990 through 1992. On May 25,1993, the EEOC issued its Letters of Determination finding against MMC on the issue of whether age was a fa'ctor in a pattern of layoffs. The EEOC invited MMC to participate in statutorily mandated conciliation and advised that litigation was the likely consequence of a failure to conciliate. After formal efforts at concilia-. tion were unsuccessful, the EEOC filed its enforcement action in this Court on May 26, 1994, alleging a pattern and practice of age [279]*279discrimination in layoffs affecting employeés of MMAG age 40 and over between the dates of January 1, 1990 and October 31, 1992.2

When the EEOC’s original complaint was filed, there were already pending many individual age discrimination cases and one “representative” action. The previously filed individual cases and the EEOC’s action were consolidated into one omnibus case bearing the caption of Wilkerson, et al. v. Martin Marietta, Civil Action Number 91-D-1078. The pending private actions presented a vehicle by which persons now objecting to the Consent Decree could have pursued a direct action on their own behalf to protect any claimed right or interest arising from their layoff.

The initial representative action, Floss, et al v. Martin Marietta Corp., Civil Action Number 93-D-385, defined the group represented by former employees laid off in 1990 through 1992. Persons were permitted to opt in to that action at any time from February 19, 1993, up to the filing of the action by the EEOC, a period of 15 months. A total of only 85 former employees chose to opt into that action. Another individual action, Johnson. et al. v. Martin Marietta Corp., Civil Action Number 95-D-1316, was filed on behalf of employees laid off in 1993.. Notices were mailed to all former employees age 40 and older who were laid off in 1993 giving each individual an opportunity to join in the Johnson action. Of the 1,064 former employees notified of their eligibility to opt in to the case, only 19 elected to opt in. I note for the record that none of the persons who have filed objections to the Consent Decree (collectively “the Objectors”) joined in either of these lawsuits. Further, none of the Objectors filed separate lawsuits against MMC.

The EEOC filed an Amended Complaint on November 20,1996, seeking to expand the scope of the litigation to include claims on behalf of older workers who were laid off through 1994. This amendment was a consequence of the EEOC’s ongoing investigation and matters that were agreed to during the 1996 mediation process, described below. In fact, the EEOC asserts that a negotiated term of, the settlement was MMC’s agreement to stipulate to a complaint amendment to expand the representative class by adding persons who suffered layoffs between October 1, 1992, through December 31, 1994. I granted the Motion to Amend the Complaint on November 21,1996.

II. THE MEDIATION

In January 1996, after four years of investigation, conciliation and litigation, the Parties, including the plaintiffs represented by attorney Todd McNamara (the “Private Plaintiffs”), began discussing mediation with a view toward the possible settlement of all or some of the cases. Even after agreeing to mediate, the Parties assert that they had a number of disputes concerning the process itself, For example, the Parties assert that they could not agree on a single mediator and, thus, through negotiation, agreed to use two mediators, both former judges, to mediate the dispute.

The Parties engaged the services of a highly respected mediation service, Judicial Arbiter Group, and, in particular, the services of retired District Court Judge Richard Dana and former Colorado Supreme Court Justice William Neighbors (the “Mediators”). The Parties advise that it took them over a month to negotiate the terms and conditions of the mediation process. The Parties executed a written Memorandum of Understanding on April 5,1996.

As part of the mediation agreement, the Parties embarked on extensive discovery. Each side was permitted 160 hours of depositions. The plaintiffs (both the EEOC and the Private Plaintiffs) deposed the past and present Presidents of MMAG; the past and present Vice Presidents of Human Resources; a Corporate Vice President of Human Resources; six other Human Resources Representatives; two EEO Department Representatives; and four other management level employees of MMAG. MMC deposed 17 opt-in plaintiffs and 30 class members represented by the EEOC, including former supervisors who were deeision-mak-[280]*280ers in some of the cases. The mediation agreement also required MMC to produce 275 boxes of documents, which were supplemental to the voluminous documents produced during discovery in the consolidated cases and in the EEOC’s administrative proceeding.

The next phase of the mediation was a three-day presentation to the Mediators by the Parties on both liability and damage issues.

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