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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 8 WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON AT SEATTLE 9 10 SCOTT KINGSTON, CASE NO. C19-1488 MJP 11 Plaintiff, ORDER DENYING DEFENDANTâS MOTION FOR SUMMARY 12 v. JUDGMENT; 13 INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS GRANTING IN PART DENYING MACHINES CORPORATION, IN PART PLAINTIFFâS MOTION 14 TO SEAL Defendant. 15 16 This matter comes before the Court upon Defendantâs Motion for Summary Judgment 17 (Dkt. No. 48) and upon Plaintiffâs Motion to Seal (Dkt. No. 59). Having reviewed the motions, 18 the responses (Dkt. Nos. 63, 68), the replies (Dkt. Nos. 64, 70), and the related record, the Court 19 DENIES Defendantâs Motion for Summary Judgment and GRANTS in part DENIES in part 20 Plaintiffâs Motion to Seal. 21 // 22 // 23 // 24 1 Background 2 A. Factual Background 3 Before he was terminated on April 16, 2018, Plaintiff, Scott Kingston, worked for 4 Defendant, International Business Machines Corporation (âIBMâ) for nearly 18 years. (Marshall 5 Decl., Ex. 1, Deposition of Scott Kingston (âKingston Dep.â) at 19:13-18.) Plaintiff managed a 6 team that sold embedded solutions agreements (âESAâ), which permit the customer to use IBMâs 7 software tools in its own products. As a second-line manager, Plaintiff directly supervised two 8 first-line managers, Andre Timidis and Greg Mount, who in turn supervised ESA sales 9 representatives Nick Donato and Jerome Beard. 10 Plaintiff was described as âvery ethical and very committed and [] smartâ by his direct 11 supervisor, Dave Mitchell. (Marshall Decl., Ex. 3, Deposition of Dave Mitchell (âMitchell 12 Dep.â) at 88:18-23.) And his most recent performance review, issued just six weeks before he 13 was terminated, noted that his team brought in $162 million on a fiscal year target of $111.6 14 million and he exceeded or met expectations on four of his five performance ratings. (Marshall 15 Decl., Ex. 4 at 2.) 16 Plaintiff and the other members of the ESA team were paid through a commissions 17 program called the Individual Quota Plan (IQP). (Marshall Decl., Ex. 8, Rule 30(b)(6) 18 Deposition of Karla Johnson (âJohnson Dep.â) at 84:10-15.) Every six months Plaintiffâs team 19 received an electronically issued Incentive Plan Letter (IPL), which set their target sales quotas 20 based on an accountâs baseline sales from the previous sales period and any âupliftâ âbased on 21 [IBMâs] desired growth rate.â (Kingston Dep. at 32:3-7.) 22 IBMâs policies barred capping commissions for anyone working under an IQP. (Johnson 23 Dep. at 24:11-25:15.) IBM used this policy to motivate sellers and made sure managers 24 1 understood that capping commissions was a violation of IBM policy. (Marshall Decl., Ex. 11, 2 Deposition of Stephen Leonard, (âLeonard Dep.â) at 32:8-10.) 3 1. Donato Commission 4 On June 20, 2017, another sales division asked Plaintiffâs team for help closing a deal 5 with SAS Institute. (Marshall Decl., Ex. 15 at 8.) The deal was in Plaintiffâs territory, which 6 included all ESA sales in North America, but because there had been no sales to SAS in the prior 7 year, no member of Plaintiffâs team had been assigned a required sales quota for the account. 8 (Kingston Dep. at 98:14-16.) Plaintiff assigned the SAS deal to Nick Donato and his first-line 9 manager Temidis because â[Donato] was in the correct territory for SASâ and âmay have 10 actually covered SAS at some point and [Temidis] was his manager.â (Kingston Dep. at 11 92:19-22.) 12 After the deal with SAS closed, there was confusion regarding who would be paid. IBM 13 finance executive Mark Baglini emailed an incentives team leader that â[i]t is being suggestedâ 14 that only three people should be paid commissions for the $18.266 million-dollar sale, âIs this 15 possible? How should this be managed?â (Marshall Decl., Ex. 16 at 6.) The following week, as 16 part of a group email chain with Baglini, another executive wrote that Andre Temidis and 17 Nicholas Donato âSHOULD get paid for this deal.â (Id. at 5.) But Baglini and several other 18 executives, including Karla Johnson, the Director of Sales Commissions in North America and 19 Latin America, and North American Finance VP Cindy Alexander, had an extended debate about 20 how commissions should be paid. (Marshall Decl., Ex. 17.) Alexander wrote: 21 Why did Temidis and Donato work on this deal if not in their territory, and how did everyone think they were going to be compâd? 22 (Id. at 6.) The executives agreed that Temidis and Donato should be compensated through a 23 âshare of creditâ process. (Id.) But they did not tell Plaintiff they wanted him to use a share of 24 1 credit to compensate Donato, which was a âmistake.â (Johnson Dep. at 168:20-169:5; 2 169:13-25.) 3 On July 19, 2017, the SAS transaction was added to Donato, Temidis, and ESA Tech 4 Employee Bill Sherrinâs territory assignment, nearly 20 days after the deal had closed. (Marshall 5 Decl., Ex. 21 at 3.) Eventually Donato, who worked on the deal for approximately 10 days, 6 earned a commission of $1.6 million under IBMâs commissions formula because the sale was 7 more than 2000% of his SAS quota, which was zero before the deal. (Kingston Dep. at 93:5-11; 8 109:14-22; Marshall Decl., Ex. 25 at 3.) 9 2. Beard Commissions 10 Around the same time Donato received his $1.6 million commission, one of Plaintiffâs 11 other team members, Jerome Beard, who is Black, had two commissions worth approximately 12 $1.5 million each capped at less than 15%, a multi-million-dollar reduction. In both cases, 13 Beardâs commissions were capped at the insistence of Brian Mulada, the VP, CFO, and COO of 14 IBMâs Cognitive Solutions Group. 15 On October 7, 2017, Mulada contacted Vice President of IBM Global Sales Incentives 16 and the head of commissions at IBM, Maria Lipner, about reducing Beardâs commissions. 17 (Johnson Dep. at 132:2-19.) On November 21, 2017 Rose Nunez, IBMâs Director of Channel 18 Management, emailed Mulada and Johnson with her recommendation that Beardâs commissions 19 be ââcappedâ at between 200 and 250 percent of his sales quota. Johnson responded by 20 informing Nunez that IBM does not cap commissions and that âsetting a pre defined cap is not 21 consistent with the design and terms within our plane [sic].ââ Beard v. Intâl Bus. Machines 22 Corp., No. C 18-06783 WHA, 2020 WL 1812171, at *4 (N.D. Cal. Apr. 9, 2020) (citations 23 omitted). Nevertheless, Beardâs commissions were capped, while Donato kept his. 24 1 After an internal investigation found no wrongdoing, Beard filed suit. See Beard, 2020 2 WL 1812171. In denying IBMâs motion for summary judgment on Beardâs race discrimination 3 claim in that case, the court found that â[a]tleast with respect to Donato, Beard has shown that 4 Donato was a similarly situated employee outside of his protected class whom IBM treated more 5 favorably, or so a jury could reasonably find.â Id. at *12. 6 3. Plaintiff Reports Discrimination 7 Plaintiff did not learn that Beardâs commission would be capped until November 13, 8 2017, when Nunez called to tell him. Plaintiff testified that he immediately told Nunez that 9 capping Beardâs commission âwas a violation of the companyâs policies and potentially the 10 lawsâ and complained about the âincongruityâ of capping Beard when Donato had recently 11 received an uncapped commission. (Kingston Dep. at 64:1-66:14.) Plaintiff âpointed out the 12 possibility of racial discrimination and the fact that it was an appearance that would be hard to 13 overlook, given that Nick Donato was white and Jerome Beard was black.â (Id. at 65:16-19.) 14 Following that call, Nunez wrote to Brian Mulada that she âconnected with [Plaintiff] 15 yesterdayâ and described Plaintiffâs âgeneral commentsâ: 16 Make sure these âcapsâ are known up-front going forward. They are okay with the limitation but they donât want reps [to] think they are being singled out or treated 17 unfairly 18 - It is like playing football, winning the game, then someone tells you the touchdowns are now worth 3 pts instead of 7 pts. 19 (Marshall Decl., Ex. 31 at 2.) The following day Mulada forwarded the message to Cindy 20 Alexander, the North American Finance VP who would later play a role in terminating Plaintiff. 21 (Id.) 22 After speaking with Nunez, Plaintiff called his supervisor Dave Mitchell and told him 23 âthe fact that [Beard] was a minority and we had paid a nonminority in the preceding months left 24 1 the discrimination possibility as open and validâ and âbegged him to carry up my escalation to 2 get proper review and hopefully resolve the problem in a logical way.â (Kingston Dep. at 3 70:11-17.) Plaintiff also told his new supervisor, Dorothy Copeland, about his concerns, 4 bringing up Beardâs commission âevery time [he] spoke to [Copeland] or [Mitchell] in the 5 subsequent days and weeks.â (Id. at 71:14-15.) In early January, Plaintiff had a call with Nunez, 6 Copeland, Mitchell, Greg Mount, âand maybe some others,â where he explained that the 7 âtreatment [of Beard] was unfair, there was no policy for it, it was contrary to the written policy 8 and that [Beardâs] race was the obvious remaining root cause for the behavior.â (Id. at 9 75:11-18.) 10 4. Internal Audit 11 On October 7, 2017, the same day Mulada contacted Lipner about reducing Beardâs 12 commissions, the Director of Finance of IBMâs North America Systems emailed Johnson about 13 Donatoâs commission: âdo you know how these payments were validated before they were 14 made?â (Marshall Decl., Ex. 20 at 3.) In response, Johnson wrote, âfirst it is IBMâs policy that 15 we do not cap payments.â (Id. at 2.) She then noted that Donatoâs commission approval had 16 followed the normal process for significant overachievement. (Id.) Johnson did not note any 17 surprise or any kind of problem at that point. (Johnson Dep. at 131:8-11.) Johnsonâs manager, 18 Maria Lipner, also did not indicate âany kind of a problemâ with Donatoâs commission. (Id. at 19 131:19-22.) 20 But the following week, October 16, 2017, Johnson reported Plaintiff to Internal Audit 21 because he added SAS to Donatoâs territory without adding any quota requirement for the 22 account. (Johnson Dep. at 29:19-30:5; Marshall Decl., Ex. 24.) Johnson would later testify that 23 she agrees quotas should not be added after a deal closes because it would not be fair to the sales 24 representative. (Johnson Dep. at 145:14-146:8.) 1 In late October, early November 2017, Charles Jeffrey Larkin from the Internal Audit 2 Department began investigating Johnsonâs referral; he did not conduct interviews until January 3 2018. (Marshall Decl., Ex. 40, Deposition of Charles Larkin (âLarkin Dep.â) at 86:3-18.) When 4 Larkin interviewed Plaintiff in January, Plaintiff told him âJerome Beard was the first time 5 [he]âd ever seen the company arbitrarily decide to cap somebodyâs pay without a logical 6 explanation and the fact that he was a minority left a â a possibility at that point in time that it 7 was race related.â (Kingston Dep. at 82:2-7; see also Larkin Dep. at 56:5-12.) 8 5. Plaintiff is Terminated 9 On February 28, 2018, Larkin submitted his final report on Donatoâs commission to IBM 10 HR executive Linda Kenny, concluding: 11 Mr. Temidis and Mr. Kingston were negligent in not initiating an adjustment (reduction) of Mr. Donato's commission for his work in closing a significant 12 transaction into an account (SAS) for which he had no quota . . . both told IA that they were familiar with the significant transaction clause which allows IBM the 13 latitude to reduce commissions in such circumstances. However, both . . . were uncomfortable about capping commissions under any circumstances[.] 14 (Marshall Decl., Ex. 21 at 4.) 15 After reviewing Larkinâs report in early April 2018, Kenny recommended terminating 16 Plaintiff and his first-line manager, Temidis. (Ex. No. 30, Deposition of Linda Kenny (âKenny 17 Dep.â) at 26:1-10.) Lisa Mihalik, a Human Resources VP who was on the Disciplinary Action 18 Review Committee, testified that â[u]ltimatelyâ âDorothy Copeland, Ste[ph]en Leonard, Lisa 19 Mihalik, Scott Ferrauiola, and Cindy Alexander . . . are the decision-makers,â who decided 20 Plaintiff would be terminated. (Ex. No 14, Deposition of Lisa Mihalik (âMihalik Dep.â) at 21 100:2-6.) 22 Plaintiffâs direct supervisor, Copeland, told Plaintiff he was terminated. Plaintiff 23 describes Copeland during that discussion as unwilling to âown any of the responsibility and â 24 1 pretend[ing] such a level of ignorance of both the facts and the investigation and the conclusions 2 that her involvement was as close to irrelevant as I could imagine.â (Kingston Dep. at 3 135:25-136:4.) Copeland testified she felt she could not reject the findings of the investigation 4 without the support of Leonard and Mihalik, which she did not have. (Marshall Decl., Ex. 5, 5 Deposition of Dorothy Copeland (âCopeland Dep.â) at 139:4-11.) 6 Yet Copeland is the only member of the Committee who admits knowing that Plaintiff 7 complained about discrimination, testifying that Plaintiff told her Beardâs capped commission 8 âwas inconsistent and [happened] because Jerome Beard is African-American.â (Id. at 54:1-3.) 9 But she also testified that she never told anyone about Plaintiffâs concerns because â[i]t wasnât 10 something that occurred to [her].â (Id. at 54:8-22.) And she does not recall whether Beardâs 11 commission was discussed during the Committee meeting. (Id. at 54:23-56:16.) 12 However, just two days after the Committee met, Alexander, an âultimate 13 decisionmakerâ forwarded Nunezâs email describing Plaintiffâs concerns about Beardâs 14 commission to Larkin and Kenny, the Internal Audit investigator and the HR executive who 15 recommended terminating Plaintiff. (Marshall Decl., Ex. 31 at 2.) IBM has taken the position 16 that the topics discussed during the Committee meeting are privileged. (Mihalik Dep. at 122:14- 17 124:20; Kenny Dep. at 289:24-293:7) 18 6. Remaining Commission Payments 19 When Plaintiff was terminated, he was paid his commissions for Q1 based on the ledger 20 at that time. (Kingston Dep. at 152:10-155:3.) But after April 1, 2018, the ledger was revised 21 and $2,485,186.86 was added to the revenue credit from deals closed within Plaintiffâs territory. 22 (Kingston Dep. at 152:10-155:3; Marshall Decl., Ex. 52 at 3-4, 5-7.) Plaintiff alleges he is owed 23 an additional $113,728 from this adjustment based on his commission formula. (Dkt. No. 63 at 24 23; Kingston Dep. at 152:10-155:3; Marshall Decl., Ex. 52 at 5-7.) 1 7. Age 2 In addition to his allegation that he was terminated as retaliation for his reports of racial 3 discrimination, Plaintiff also alleges his ageâhe was 58 in April 2018âwas a factor in his 4 termination. (Kingston Dep. at 140:4-5.) Plaintiff recalls âgeneral conversations about the 5 desire to place younger people in roles.â (Id. at 144:5-7.) He heard Stephen Leonard, who was 6 on the Disciplinary Action Review Committee, suggest he supported Project Sunrise, allegedly 7 an IBM program to lay off older workers in favor of younger ones. (Id. at 144:17-19.) And 8 around the time Plaintiff was terminated, the EEOC issued a determination based on charges 9 brought by older employees of IBM who alleged they were discharged based on their age. 10 (Marshall Decl., Ex. 55.) âThe investigation uncovered top-down messaging from [IBM]âs 11 highest ranks directing managers to engage in an aggressive approach to significantly reduce the 12 headcount of older workers to make room for Early Professional Hires.â (Id. at 3.) 13 Further, several people involved in Plaintiffâs termination had reason to believe he was 14 older than 40. Larkin testified that he âwould have assumedâ Plaintiff was over 40 (Larkin Dep. 15 at 295:16-22), Copeland understood that Plaintiff had âworked at IBM for a long timeâ 16 (Copeland Dep. at 223:8-12), and consistency reviewer Russ Mandel, who reviewed Larkinâs 17 recommendation before sending it to the Committee, testified that he read in Larkinâs report that 18 Plaintiff had been with IBM for 17 years (Marshall Decl., Ex. 49, Deposition of Russell Edward 19 Mandel (âMandel Dep.â) at 175:15-17). 20 B. Procedural Background 21 Plaintiff filed this action on September 16, 2019, alleging claims for (1) retaliation in 22 violation of the Washington Law Against Discrimination (WLAD); (2) breach of express 23 unilateral contract; (3) breach of implied-in-fact contract; (4) unpaid wages on termination; (5) 24 failure to pay wages pursuant to RCW 49.52.050; (6) unjust enrichment; (7) wrongful 1 termination in violation of public policy; and (8) age discrimination in violation of RCW 2 49.60.180. (Dkt. No. 20.) On April 15, 2020, the Court dismissed Plaintiffâs claims for breach 3 of express unilateral contract, breach of implied-in-fact contract, violation of RCW 49.48.010, 4 and failure to pay wages pursuant to RCW 49.52.050. (Dkt. No. 27.) IBM now moves for 5 summary judgment on Plaintiffâs remaining claims of (1) retaliation; (2) wrongful termination; 6 (3) unjust enrichment, and; (4) age discrimination. (Dkt. No. 48.) 7 Discussion 8 I. Legal Standard 9 Summary judgment is proper where âthe movant shows that there is no genuine dispute 10 as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.â Fed. R. Civ. P. 11 56(a). The movant bears the initial burden of demonstrating the absence of a genuine issue of 12 fact. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986). In assessing whether a party has met 13 its burden, the underlying evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non- 14 movant. Matsuhisa Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986). 15 II. IBMâs Motion for Summary Judgment 16 A. Retaliation 17 Plaintiff alleges he was terminated as retaliation for his reports of illegal discrimination 18 against Beard. To establish a prima facie case, Plaintiff must prove (1) he engaged in statutorily 19 protected activity; (2) Defendants took an adverse employment action; and (3) there was a causal 20 link between the protected activity and the adverse action. See Harris v. City of Seattle, 315 F. 21 Supp. 2d 1112, 1125 (W.D. Wash. 2004) (citing Bierlein v. Byrne, 103 Wn. App. 865, 871 22 (2000)). ââIf the employee makes out a prima facie case, the burden shifts to the employer to 23 show a legitimate, nondiscriminatory basisâ for its actions.â Tyner v. State, 137 Wash. App. 545, 24 1 563-64 (2007) (quoting Milligan v. Thompson, 110 Wash.App. 628, 636 (2002)). If the 2 employer succeeds, the employee must produce evidence that the articulated reason is mere 3 pretext for discrimination. Id. 4 1. Prima Facie Case 5 IBM argues that Plaintiff has not established the element of causation, alleging that no 6 one responsible for terminating Plaintiff was aware Plaintiff reported discrimination and Plaintiff 7 only reported discrimination after Johnsonâs referral to Internal Audit. (Dkt. No. 48 at 11-14.) 8 IBMâs arguments do not withstand scrutiny. 9 First, IBM alleges that Plaintiff only told three people about his concerns that Mr. Beard 10 was being discriminated against based on his raceâNunez, Mitchell, and Copelandâthese 11 people âdid not tell anyone about Plaintiffâs concerns,â and they were not the ultimate 12 decisionmakers in deciding to terminate Plaintiff. (Id. at 11.) The evidence suggests otherwise. 13 In January, around the time Larkin began his investigation, Plaintiff had a call with 14 Nunez, Copeland, Mitchell, Mount, âand maybe some others,â where he explained that the 15 âtreatment [of Beard] was unfair, there was no policy for it, it was contrary to the written policy 16 and that his race was the obvious remaining root cause for the behavior.â (Kingston Dep. at 17 75:11-18.) Plaintiff also reported racial discrimination in his interview with Larkin (Larkin Dep. 18 at 56:5-12) and two days after the Disciplinary Committee met, but before Plaintiff was 19 terminated, Alexander, an âultimate decisionmaker,â forwarded the email describing Plaintiffâs 20 concern that capping Beardâs commission âmade reps think they are being singled out or treated 21 unfairlyâ to Kenny, another âultimate decisionmakerâ and Larkin. (Ex. 31 at 2.) After this 22 email, Mitchell, Copeland, Mount, Nunez, Mulada, Alexander, Kenny, Larkin, âand maybe some 23 24 1 others,â were all aware that Plaintiff raised concerns about Beardâs capped commission. 2 (Kingston Dep. at 75:11-18.) 3 Further, a reasonable fact-finder might wonder why Plaintiffâs supervisors did not report 4 his concerns of illegal conduct to âanyone.â (Dkt. No. 48 at 11.) Plaintiffâs first supervisor 5 admits Plaintiff relayed Mr. Beardâs concerns that his delayed commission was because of his 6 race, but contends he ânever told anyone about any concerns [Plaintiff] may have had about race 7 discrimination,â apparently including HR. (Dkt. No. 49, Ex. K, Declaration of Dave Mitchell, 8 ¶¶ 5-6.) Plaintiffâs next supervisor, Dorothy Copeland, testified that after Plaintiff explained his 9 concerns that Beardâs capped commission âwas inconsistentâ and happened âbecause Jerome 10 Beard is African-Americanâ she never told anyone else about his report because â[i]t wasnât 11 something that occurred to [her].â (Copeland Dep. at 54:8-22.) 12 IBM also admits Plaintiff reported his concerns about discrimination to Copeland and she 13 ultimately terminated Plaintiff, but argues she was not actually a âdecision-maker,â instead 14 âmerely implement[ing] the recommendations.â (Copeland Dep. at 54:8-22; Dkt. No. 48 at 12.) 15 Copeland testified she could not reject the findings of the investigation without the support of 16 Leonard and Mihalik, which she did not have (Copeland Dep. at 139:4-11), and Plaintiff testified 17 that when Copeland terminated him âshe wouldnât own any of the responsibility and -- pretended 18 such a level of ignorance of both the facts and the investigation and the conclusions that her 19 involvement was as close to irrelevant as I could imagine.â (Kingston Dep. at 135:25-136:4.) At 20 most, however, this testimony creates a genuine issue of disputed material fact when weighed 21 against Copelandâs role in terminating Plaintiff and the assertion of another member of the 22 Committee (see Mihalik Dep. at 100:2-6) that Copeland was one of a handful of âultimateâ 23 decisionmakers. 24 1 Finally, IBM contends that because Johnson reported Plaintiff to Internal Audit on 2 October 16, 2017, a month before Plaintiff first reported his concerns about discrimination, the 3 timing precludes âa finding of any causal connection between his termination and his alleged 4 protected activity.â (Dkt. No. 48 at 12.) But the adverse employment action at issue here is 5 Plaintiffâs termination, not his referral to Internal Audit. See Boyd v. State, Dep't of Soc. & 6 Health Servs., 187 Wash. App. 1, 13 (2015) (âAn adverse employment action involves a change 7 in employment that is more than an inconvenience or alteration of oneâs job responsibilities.â). 8 And it is undisputed that by the time Plaintiff was terminated not only was his direct supervisor 9 aware he reported discrimination, but so was the Internal Audit investigator and likely many 10 others. 11 1. Pretext 12 IBM proffers the following reasons for terminating Plaintiff and Mr. Temidis: 13 [T]hey did not add quota for the SAS deal to Mr. Donatoâs quota as required, they were aware of but did not use the [Significant] Transaction provision or speak 14 with anyone about using that provision, and they exercised poor business judgment by not speaking with the upline manager before approving the 15 commissions even though Plaintiff said he expected his manager to raise red flags that never materialized. 16 (Dkt. No. 48 at 13.) Plaintiff notes that each of these proffered reasons is contrary to IBM 17 policy, and thus demonstrates that IBMâs reasons are merely pretextual. First, as a Rule 30(b)(6) 18 witness, Johnson agreed that quotas should not be added after a deal closes. (Johnson Dep. at 19 145:14-20.) She also testified that using the significant transaction provision to cap Donatoâs 20 commission would have violated IBMâs written policies. (Id. at 25:7-17.) IBMâs final proffered 21 reasonâthat Plaintiff failed to speak with his upline manager before approving the 22 commissionâis a new reason, listed nowhere in Larkinâs report, that is undercut by Johnsonâs 23 contemporaneous email concluding that Plaintiff followed the ânormal process for significant 24 1 overachievement,â which ârequires the First Line and Second Line Managerâs approval and 2 when >400% achievement a report is also sent to the BU VP,â all of which was done in this case. 3 (Marshall Decl., Ex. 20 at 2; see also Ex. 21.) IBM has therefore yet to articulate a reason for 4 terminating Plaintiff that is consistent with its own policies. 5 This was a confused process where Plaintiffâwho followed IBMâs written policies to the 6 letterâwas terminated for failing to violate those policies. Meanwhile, Donato, whose 7 commission was apparently so egregious that Plaintiff was terminated for failing to cap it, kept 8 his commission unlike his Black colleague, whose commission was capped at 15%. Under these 9 circumstances, a reasonable fact-finder could determine that IBMâs proffered reasons for 10 terminating Plaintiff are pretextual. 11 B. Wrongful Termination 12 Plaintiff alleges he was terminated in violation of public policy for reporting IBMâs 13 misconduct. To establish a prima facie case of wrongful discharge in violation of public policy, 14 an employee must show (1) that âhis or her âdischarge may have been motivated by reasons that 15 contravene a clear mandate of public policy,ââ Martin v. Gonzaga Univ., 191 Wash. 2d 712, 725 16 (2018) (quoting Thompson v. St. Regis Paper Co., 102 Wash.2d 219, 232-33 (1984) (additional 17 citation omitted)), and (2) that the public-policy-linked conduct was a significant factor in the 18 decision to discharge the worker. Martin, 191 Wash.2d at 723. 19 Plaintiff alleges that he was terminated for reporting IBMâs misconduct under the Wage 20 Act and for reporting racial discrimination against Beard. Because the Court previously found 21 that under the terms of the IPL, IBM had the right to âcancel the commissions altogetherâ and 22 therefore dismissed Plaintiffâs Wage Act claim (Dkt. No. 27 at 10), Plaintiff has failed to meet 23 24 1 his burden of demonstrating that he was protecting any employeeâs public-policy backed right to 2 the commissions. 3 However, because Washington has a public policy against racial discrimination see RCW 4 49.60.030, and as discussed, supra, material issues of disputed fact exist as to whether Plaintiff 5 was terminated for reporting discrimination against Beard, Plaintiffâs claim of wrongful 6 discharge survives IBMâs motion for summary judgment. 7 C. Age Discrimination 8 Plaintiff also alleges he was terminated because he was an older employee, 58 at the time 9 he was discharged. Under the WLAD, it is unlawful for an employer to âdischarge or bar any 10 person from employment because of age.â RCW 49.60.180(2). âThe employee has the initial 11 burden of presenting a prima facie case of age discrimination.â Becker v. Washington State 12 Univ., 165 Wash. App. 235, 252 (2011). After the plaintiff establishes a prima facie case of 13 discrimination, the burden shifts to the employer, who must articulate a legitimate, 14 nondiscriminatory reason for the adverse employment action. Mikkelsen v. Pub. Util. Dist. No. 15 1 of Kittitas Cty., 189 Wash. 2d 516, 533 (2017). If the employer meets this burden, âthe 16 employee needs only to present evidence sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact 17 whether âdiscrimination was a substantial factor in an adverse employment action, not the only 18 motivating factor.ââ Id. 19 IBM does not contest specific elements of Plaintiffâs prima facie case but argues that 20 âPlaintiff bases his age discrimination claim on nothing besides speculationâ and has failed to 21 demonstrate that age discrimination was a substantial factor in his termination. (Dkt. No. 48 at 22 16-17.) IBM cites only one case in support of its argument, Grimwood v. Univ. of Puget Sound, 23 Inc., 110 Wash. 2d 355, 361 (1988), abrogated on other grounds by Mikkelsen, 189 Wash. 2d 24 1 516. In Grimwood, when asked during his deposition for the basis of his claim, the plaintiff 2 explained he alleged age discrimination âbecause I donât feel I was given sufficiently good 3 reason for my termination so I feel it has to be fundamentally another reason and thatâs all I can 4 come up with.â Id. at 361. 5 In contrast, Plaintiff has introduced some evidence of age discrimination here. He heard a 6 member of the Disciplinary Action Review Committee mention he supported Project Sunrise, a 7 program allegedly designed to lay off older employees. (Kingston Dep. at 144:17-19.) Plaintiff 8 also recalls âgeneral conversations about the desire to place younger people in roles.â (Kingston 9 Dep. at 144:5-7.) And around the time Plaintiff was terminated, the EEOC found evidence of 10 âtop-down messaging from [IBM]âs highest ranks directing managers to engage in an aggressive 11 approach to significantly reduce the headcount of older workers to make room for Early 12 Professional Hires.â (Id.) 13 Plaintiff has also presented evidence that several people involved in his terminationâ 14 Larkin, Copeland, Mandelâknew he was older than 40. (See Dkt. No. 63 at 23 (citing Larkin 15 Dep. at 295:16-22; Copeland Dep. at 223:8-12; Mandel Dep. at 175:15-17.) And a reasonable 16 fact-finder could find it implausible that the individuals who terminated him, including his direct 17 supervisor, believed he was younger than the protected age category of 40, or that the HR 18 committee terminated him without reviewing his personnel file. Viewing the evidence in the 19 light most favorable to Plaintiff, there are genuine issues of fact regarding his age discrimination 20 claim that should be presented to the jury. 21 D. Unjust Enrichment 22 Plaintiff also brings a claim for unjust enrichment, alleging that after his termination, 23 IBMâs revenue team recalculated the ledger for deals Plaintiff worked on in Q1 2018 and he is 24 1 owed additional commissions pursuant to this recalculation. Adequately pleading an unjust 2 enrichment claim requires Plaintiff to assert âa benefit conferred upon the defendant by the 3 plaintiff,â plus âthe acceptance or retention by the defendant of the benefit under such 4 circumstances as to make it inequitable for the defendant to retain the benefit without the 5 payment of its value.â Young v. Young, 164 Wn.2d 477, 484 (2008). Unjust enrichment claims 6 rely on âquasi-contractsâ that âarise from an implied legal duty or obligation, and are not based 7 on a contract between the parties, or any consent or agreement.â Chandler v. Washington Toll 8 Bridge Auth., 17 Wash. 2d 591, 600 (1943). 9 IBM has admitted that after April 1, 2018, $2,485,186.86 was added to the revenue credit 10 from deals closed within Plaintiffâs territory. (Dkt. No. 63 at 23; Kingston Dep. at 152:10-155:3; 11 Marshall Decl., Ex. 52 at 5-7.) IBM has not contested Plaintiffâs calculation that this increased 12 revenue calculation would entitle him to an additional $113,728 based on his commission 13 formula. (Dkt. No. 63 at 23; Kingston Dep. at 152:10-155:3; Marshall Decl., Ex. 56 at 5-7.) And 14 if, as Plaintiff alleges, he was terminated for reporting illegal discrimination, IBMâs retention of 15 his commission would be inequitable. 16 While IBM argues that Plaintiffâs claim is foreclosed by a provision in the IPL (Dkt. No. 17 48 at 18), the Court previously dismissed Plaintiffâs contractual claims (Dkt. No. 27 at 5), and a 18 claim of unjust enrichment is not based on a contract between the parties. IBMâs second 19 argument fares no better. It contends âPlaintiff admitted in his deposition that he was paid all 20 commissions he was due as of the last day of his employment.â (Dkt. Nos. 48 at 17; 64 at 10.) 21 This is simply not true. Plaintiff testified that he was paid all commissions â[a]ccording to the 22 revenue that was on the ledger [when he was terminated].â (Kingston Dep. at 154:3 4.) But he 23 24 1 learned the ledger was subsequently revised to reflect additional commissions for ârevenue [that] 2 was attributed to that first quarter, not to a following period.â (Id. at 153:17 19.) 3 Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, the Court could find that 4 retention of the benefit conferred by Plaintiff without payment of its full value is inequitable. 5 III. Plaintiffâs Motion to Seal 6 Plaintiff moves to seal 33 exhibits submitted in support of its brief that IBM designated 7 as confidential during discovery. (Dkt. No. 59.) In response, IBM concedes that 14 of these 8 exhibits should be public, but asserts that 17 should remain completely under seal, and portions 9 of two additional deposition transcripts should remain partially redacted. Plaintiff argues IBM 10 waived its right to designate deposition testimony as confidential by failing to do so in 11 accordance with the Partiesâ agreed timeline. (Dkt. No. 70 at 3 (citing Dkt. No. 37 at 5.2(b).) In 12 order to keep the exhibits under seal, IBM must demonstrate âcompelling reasons supported by 13 specific factual findings . . . outweigh the general history of access and the public policies 14 favoring disclosure.â Kamakana v. City & Cnty. of Honolulu, 447 F.3d 1172, 1178-79 (9th Cir. 15 2006) (internal citations omitted). The Court finds that IBM has met this standard for the 17 16 exhibits it wishes to keep completely sealed, and for two of the four deposition excerpts it seeks 17 to redact. 18 IBM argues that 17 documents should be filed completely under seal because they 19 contain confidential and proprietary information, including confidential sales compensation 20 information, customer information, and information related to IBMâs business operations, 21 including quota setting, commissions reviews, internal investigations, and financial processes. 22 (Dkt. No. 68 at 3.) IBM supports its position with the Declarations of Linda Kenny, Karla 23 24 1 Johnson, and Nancy LaCivita in support. (Dkt. No. 68, Ex. A-C.) The Court finds that these 2 documents should remain sealed. 3 But IBM also seeks to redact deposition testimony discussing IBMâs changing use of 4 acronyms (Kingston Dep. at 89:3-25), IBMâs policy of not capping payments (discussed publicly 5 in Beard, supra) (Johnson Dep. at 129:10-131:3), adding quotas after a deal closes (Id. at 6 145:1-146:25), and IBMâs recent sales history with SAS (Id. at 170:19-171:12). While IBMâs 7 failure to seal these excerpts pursuant to the timeline set forth in the Partiesâ protective order 8 undercuts its argument that these excerpts are highly confidential, the Court finds the last two 9 excerpts are sensitive and were not previously made public (Johnson Dep. at 145:1-146:25, 10 170:19-171:12). These excerpts will therefore remain redacted. 11 Conclusion 12 Because Plaintiff has raised a genuine issue of material fact as to each of his claims, the 13 Court finds IBM has failed to meet its burden and its Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt. No. 14 48) is DENIED. Further, Plaintiffâs Motion to Seal (Dkt. No. 59) is GRANTED in part, 15 DENIED in part. The Exhibits to the Declaration of Toby J. Marshall (Dkt. No. 61) shall 16 remained sealed. Plaintiff is ORDERED to submit unsealed copies of the following exhibits 17 within 14 days of the date of this Order: 18 (1) Exhibit Nos. 3, 5, 7, 11, 14, 22, 25, 27, 29, 30, 35, 37, 40, and 49; 19 (2) Exhibit No. 35 (Johnson Dep.) shall be unsealed except as redacted at 145:1-146:25 20 and 170:19-171:12. 21 // 22 // 23 // 24 1 The clerk is ordered to provide copies of this order to all counsel. 2 Dated March 1, 2021. A 3 4 Marsha J. Pechman 5 United States Senior District Judge 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Case Information
- Court
- W.D. Wash.
- Decision Date
- March 1, 2021
- Status
- Precedential