Tapp et al., v. SkyWest Inc., et al.,
Filing
142
MEMORANDUM Opinion and Order Signed by the Honorable John J. Tharp, Jr on 9/24/2019: For the foregoing reasons, the plaintiffs' motions to transfer are denied. The parties are directed to proceed with the briefing schedules set for the plaintiffs' motion for leave to file an amended operative complaint and the defendants' consolidated motion to dismiss. Mailed notice(air, )
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
ANDREA HIRST, MOLLY STOVER,
and EMILY STROBLE SZE,
on behalf of themselves and all others
similarly situated,
Plaintiffs,
v.
SKYWEST, INC. and SKYWEST
AIRLINES, INC.,
Defendants.
CHERYL TAPP, RENEE SITAVICH,
SARAH HUDSON, BRANDON
COLSON, and BRÜNO LOZANO,
on behalf of themselves and all others
similarly situated,
Plaintiffs,
v.
SKYWEST, INC. and SKYWEST
AIRLINES, INC.,
Defendants.
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No. 15 C 02036
Judge John J. Tharp, Jr.
No. 15 C 11117
Judge John J. Tharp, Jr.
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiffs brought these suits in 2015, challenging SkyWest’s “block-time” compensation
structure for flight attendants under the Fair Labor Standards Act and wage and hour laws of
several states (Arizona, California, Illinois, and Washington). Initially, Hirst was filed in the
Northern District of Illinois and Tapp in the Northern District of California. 1 The plaintiffs
stipulated to transfer Tapp to this District. The Tapp case was assigned to this Court as related to
Hirst, and the two cases have thereafter moved in tandem. After first dismissing the plaintiffs’
claims without prejudice and permitting repleading, this Court ultimately dismissed all FLSA
claims in both cases and held that the Dormant Commerce Clause precluded the plaintiffs’ state
law wage claims, ECF No. 107. The Court entered final judgment on behalf of SkyWest in
November 2017, and the plaintiffs appealed. The Seventh Circuit affirmed the dismissal of the
plaintiffs’ FLSA claims but reinstated their state law claims. ECF No. 120. The parties filed
petitions for writs of certiorari to the United States Supreme Court and requested to stay
proceedings pending the Court’s ruling on those petitions. ECF Nos. 125, 128. Both petitions were
denied, and this Court lifted the stay on June 27, 2019. ECF No. 131.
Meanwhile, in February 2019, another action by SkyWest flight attendants, asserting wage
claims under California law, was filed in the Superior Court of San Francisco; SkyWest removed
the case to the Northern District of California, Wilson et al. v. SkyWest et al., No. 3:19-CV-01491VC, and then filed a motion to transfer Wilson to the Northern District of Illinois. Wilson ECF No.
16. SkyWest withdrew that transfer motion, however, in light of Ninth Circuit authority prohibiting
courts from considering the claims of putative class members for purposes of determining venue
prior to class certification, Wilson ECF Nos. 25, 26. Shortly after this Court lifted the stay of
proceedings in Hirst and Tapp, SkyWest filed a motion with the United States Judicial Panel on
Multidistrict Litigation (“JPML”), seeking to establish a multidistrict litigation (“MDL”)
proceeding comprising the three cases and to transfer Wilson to this Court for coordinated pretrial
1
This Order cites to the Hirst docket unless otherwise noted.
2
proceedings. ECF No. 133. 2 Three weeks later, the plaintiffs in both Hirst and Tapp filed the
instant motion to transfer these cases to the Northern District of California, where Wilson is
pending, for consolidated proceedings in that District. ECF No. 139.
The premise of SkyWest’s MDL motion is that consolidation of these three cases in a single
forum is necessary because the cases involve similar legal claims arising from a common factual
context (the operation of SkyWest’s “block-time” compensation structure). “It would be
inconvenient and manifestly unfair,” SkyWest maintains, to require it “to defend itself against
similar claims, brought on behalf of the same employees, on the same theory, in different
jurisdictions, potentially resulting in conflicting results.” Mem. Supp. MDL Mot. 1, ECF No. 1332. SkyWest also posits that consolidating the three cases would cure “the inconvenience to the
witnesses—on both sides—who would have to repeatedly pause their lives to testify in depositions
in multiple jurisdictions 2,000 miles apart.” Id.
For their part, the Hirst and Tapp plaintiffs acknowledge “that consolidation in a single
location is in the interest of judicial economy and cross-district consistency.” Pls.’ Mot. Transfer
2, ECF No. 139. There is, then, no dispute between the parties about whether consolidating these
cases in a single court is appropriate. The parties agree that these cases should be litigated in one
forum—they just disagree about whether that forum should be the Northern District of Illinois or
the Northern District of California. And as to that dispute, each side accuses the other of forum
shopping, and the Court will address that issue at the threshold.
Are the parties’ positions about where the claims asserted in these cases should be resolved
influenced by an assessment of where they believe (rightly or wrongly) they are likely to have the
2
A hearing on SkyWest’s MDL motion is scheduled before the JPML on September 26,
2019.
3
most success? Of course they are. In this Court, the plaintiffs have lost their leading claim, under
FLSA, and had final judgment entered against them (though their state law claims were revived
after appeal); it is hardly surprising to find, in light of these setbacks, the plaintiffs advocating for
transfer of these cases to a new forum while SkyWest seeks to engineer the transfer of another case
to this Court. And here’s the proof of the forum-shopping pudding: while each side agrees that the
cases should be consolidated in a single forum, neither is willing to accede to consolidation in the
preferred forum of the other. No matter the benefits of consolidation, each side prefers a split
result—preserving some ability to litigate in the forum of its choosing—to one in which all claims
are heard by the Court in the other side’s favored venue. SkyWest opposes the plaintiffs’ motion
regardless of the JPML court’s ruling on its MDL motion; the Hirst and Tapp plaintiffs oppose
MDL transfer of Wilson to this Court even if one or both of those cases remain in Chicago. Plainly,
the parties’ respective motions have more to do with how they have fared to date in this Court than
with achieving the benefits of consolidation.
In light of this sort of mutual gamesmanship, it is tempting to say: “A pox on both your
houses,” 3 and to leave each case right where it is. But while doing so might deny both sides their
preferred outcome (consolidation of all three cases in their preferred forum), it would not serve the
interests that § 1404(a) is intended to promote. Gamesmanship aside, the Court agrees with the
parties that these cases should be resolved in a single forum and that doing so will serve the
convenience of the parties and witnesses and the interest of justice. Accordingly, it is incumbent
3
William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet act 3, sc. 1 (also quoted as “A plague o’ both
your houses”).
4
upon this Court to resolve what the parties dispute: whether transferring these cases to the Northern
District of California is permitted and warranted under § 1404(a). 4
Section 1404(a) provides that “[f]or the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest
of justice, a district court may transfer any civil action to any other district or division where it
might have been brought or to any district or division to which all parties have consented.”
Transferring a case under § 1404(a) is appropriate when “(1) venue is proper in the transferor
district, (2) venue and jurisdiction are proper in the transferee district, and (3) the transfer will
serve the convenience of the parties, the convenience of the witnesses, and the interest of justice.”
Vandeveld v. Christoph, 877 F. Supp. 1160, 1167 (N.D. Ill. 1995). Courts in the Seventh Circuit
consider a variety of factors in analyzing when a motion to transfer should be granted. With respect
to the “interest of justice,” these factors include “docket congestion and likely speed to trial in the
transferor and potential transferee forums,” each court’s “relative familiarity with the relevant
law,” the “respective desirability of resolving controversies in each locale,” and “the relationship
of each community to the controversy.” Research Automation, Inc. v. Schrader-Bridgeport Int’l,
Inc., 626 F.3d 973, 978 (7th Cir. 2010). With respect to the convenience of the parties and
witnesses, they include “(1) the plaintiff’s choice of forum; (2) the situs of material events; (3) the
relative ease of access to sources of proof; (4) the convenience of the witnesses; and (5) the
convenience to the parties of litigating in the respective forums.” Body Sci. LLC v. Bos. Sci. Corp.,
846 F. Supp. 2d 980, 992 (N.D. Ill. 2012) (citing Research Automation, Inc., 626 F.3d at 978). The
“interest of justice may be determinative, warranting transfer or its denial even where the
convenience of the parties and witnesses points toward the opposite result.” Research Automation,
4
The Court recognizes that, given SkyWest’s pending motion before the JPML, this
Court’s ruling does not finally resolve either the question of consolidation of Wilson or the location
of a consolidated MDL proceeding.
5
Inc., 626 F.3d at 978. And where venue is improper in the transferee court, the action may not be
transferred even if the interest of justice and convenience of the parties and witnesses would favor
transfer. See Aliano v. Quaker Oats Co., No. 16-CV-3087, 2017 WL 56638, at *4 (N.D. Ill. Jan.
4, 2017).
For Hirst, the inquiry is straightforward. Under § 1404(a), a case may be transferred to any
district or division in which it might have been brought or to which all parties have consented.
Defendants have indicated that they will not consent to transfer, Defs.’ Opp’n to Pls.’ Mot.
Transfer 6, ECF No. 150, which forecloses one option under § 1404(a). The other is equally
unavailing, because Hirst could not originally have been brought in the Northern District of
California—a fact the plaintiffs effectively concede by their failure to argue otherwise. Venue for
the Hirst case is improper because Hirst brings only Illinois state law claims, 5 Hirst Second Am.
Compl. ¶¶ 131-53, ECF No. 85, and does not allege that a substantial part of the acts or omissions
giving rise to the claims occurred in California. 6 Though the Hirst plaintiffs allege claims on behalf
of a putative class, id. ¶¶ 105-13, for some of whom venue might be proper in the Northern District
of California, “the claims of unnamed class members can never make permissible an otherwise
5
The Hirst plaintiffs are seeking to amend their complaint to add a claim for failure to pay
minimum wages in violation of California law, see Hirst Proposed Third Am. Compl. ¶¶ 147-57,
ECF No. 137-1. For transfer purposes, however, venue is assessed at the time the initial complaint
was filed, not at the time of the motion to transfer or prospectively. See ESCO Corp. v. Cashman
Equip. Co., 65 F. Supp. 3d 626, 630 (C.D. Ill. 2014) (“To determine whether an action ‘might have
been brought’ in a particular district, a court must look to the state of the world at the time of
filing.”). The addition of a claim based on California law, moreover, would strengthen the
argument against transferring Tapp to California, as it would undermine the argument, discussed
below at 11-12, that transfer of Tapp would relieve this Court of the burden of addressing any
claim brought under California law. If Hirst is amended, this Court will face the purportedly
daunting task of addressing a California wage claim even if Tapp is transferred.
6
While Ms. Hirst describes an overnight layover and delayed aircraft in a pairing
originating in SFO in her complaint, Hirst Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 78-82, ECF No. 85, this incident
does not rise to the level of a “substantial part” the of acts or omissions giving rise to claims for
venue purposes, particularly as neither of her co-named plaintiffs describe incidents in California.
6
impermissible venue. Rather, in a class action, the ‘events’ in question are only those involving
the named plaintiffs.” In re Bozic, 888 F.3d 1048, 1053 (9th Cir. 2018). SkyWest ran into this
obstacle when it tried to transfer Wilson to this District pursuant to § 1404(a); the same rule applies
to the plaintiffs. Accordingly, Hirst cannot be transferred to the Northern District of California
pursuant to § 1404(a).
For Tapp, venue poses no problem; venue is proper either in the Northern District of
California, where the case was originally brought, or in the Northern District of Illinois, transfer
to which all parties consented. Nevertheless, that Hirst must remain in Chicago weighs strongly
against transferring Tapp back to the Northern District of California. As noted, the premise of the
plaintiffs’ § 1404(a) motion is that all three cases should be resolved in San Francisco, but that
simply will not happen given the absence of venue for Hirst and SkyWest’s lack of consent.
As noted, despite their acknowledgment that all three of these cases should be resolved
together, the plaintiffs reply to what they deem SkyWest’s intransigence with like obstinacy. Tapp,
they contend, should be transferred to the Northern District of California even if Hirst remains in
Chicago. Before addressing the substance of that argument, it bears noting that the plaintiffs’
motion does not actually request transfer of Tapp alone; the plaintiffs’ motion seeks transfer of
both cases and the arguments in support of the motion in their opening brief are all addressed to
the merits of transferring both cases to the court in which the Wilson case is pending. Only after
SkyWest responded to the motion—by pointing out that Hirst cannot be transferred to the Northern
District of California because there is no venue in that district and by refusing to consent to transfer
Hirst—did the plaintiffs change their ask; now, they request only the transfer of Tapp under
§ 1404(a) and that SkyWest be “strongly encouraged to consent to the transfer of [the] Hirst case
with Tapp.” Reply Supp. Pls.’ Mot. Transfer 11, ECF No. 152. The plaintiffs’ arguments extolling
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the benefits of having all three cases resolved in the Northern District of California have similarly
morphed into arguments that transferring only the Tapp case yields the same benefits,
notwithstanding that Hirst remains pending in Chicago.
So it is to consideration of that question—whether transfer of Tapp alone is warranted
under § 1404(a)—that the Court turns. The § 1404(a) analysis turns on the Court’s assessment of
the convenience factors and the interest of justice. District courts have a great deal of discretion in
assessing transfer factors, as weighing these considerations “involves a large degree of subtlety
and latitude, and, therefore, is committed to the sound discretion of the trial judge.” Coffey v. Van
Dorn Iron Works, 796 F.2d 217, 219 (7th Cir. 1986).
With respect to the convenience factors, the Tapp plaintiffs’ first choice of venue was the
Northern District of California, and ordinarily a plaintiff’s choice of forum deserves significant
weight in determining whether to transfer a case under § 1404(a). In this case, however, the
plaintiffs’ choice of forum merits much less consideration. For starters, this is a putative class
action, and “a plaintiff’s choice of forum is afforded less deference when the plaintiff represents a
class.” Lafleur v. Dollar Tree Stores, Inc., No. 11-CV-8473, 2012 WL 2280090, at *3 (N.D. Ill.
June 18, 2012). More significant still, the Tapp plaintiffs stipulated to transfer to the Northern
District of Illinois so that Tapp could be consolidated with Hirst. Their stipulation belies their
arguments about how decisively the relevant convenience factors and interest of justice favor
transferring the case; those arguments were equally availing four years ago, when the Tapp
plaintiffs agreed to the transfer to this District, but at that point the Tapp plaintiffs did not find
them of sufficient concern to object to the transfer of venue to this Court. The plaintiffs’ agreement
to transfer their claims to this Court significantly diminishes the weight to be accorded to their
original choice of forum.
8
The Tapp plaintiffs say that they should not be bound by their original stipulation, because
circumstances have unforeseeably changed. That assertion misses the point. Even assuming that
the Tapp plaintiffs are not precluded by their stipulation from seeking a return to the court in which
they originally filed their claims, their agreement to transfer their claims to this District weakens
their argument that the convenience factors and the interest of justice favor litigating the case in
the transferor district. Their claim that these factors now decisively weigh in favor of returning the
case to the Northern District of California when they did not at the outset of the case rings hollow.
What has changed? As the plaintiffs assert in their opposition to SkyWest’s MDL motion,
“virtually all that has been accomplished” in this District is the dismissal of their FLSA claims.
Resp. in Opp. 3, ECF No. 14 (MDL 2916). But dismissal of the FLSA claims hardly qualifies as
an “unforeseeable,” “unanticipatable,” or “unanticipated post-transfer event,” Reply Supp. Pls.’
Mot. Transfer 4-5, ECF No. 152, and does not warrant returning the case to the transferor district
after almost four years of litigation. A motion to dismiss all of the Hirst claims was already pending
when the Tapp plaintiffs agreed to transfer their claims, but the possibility that the FLSA claims
might not survive plainly did not then outweigh the advantages of litigating both cases in this
District. That the possibility came to pass does not warrant sending the case back to the transferor
court.
Nor does the filing of the Wilson case qualify as a changed circumstance that warrants a
do-over of the Tapp plaintiffs’ decision to stipulate to the transfer of their claims. The possibility
of additional cases against SkyWest was obviously known to the Tapp plaintiffs when they agreed
to transfer their claims to this Court—they were themselves latecomers to the party, filing their
claims in a new suit some eight months after the Hirst plaintiffs filed the initial suit against
SkyWest. The prospect that others might do the same was therefore patent and the fact that an
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additional suit was filed does not credibly explain why the Tapp plaintiffs’ evaluation of the
§ 1404(a) factors would be materially changed.
Moving on to the situs of material events and access to sources of proof, neither moves the
needle significantly in one direction or the other. As flight attendants, plaintiffs’ allegations arise
from events all over the country, and they bring wage and hour claims under the laws of multiple
states such that no one locale predominates. Similarly, “[w]ith the advent of electronic discovery,
where records are actually stored is less of a factor because documents now are easily scanned,
stored, and electronically transmitted and moving them no longer creates the onerous burden it
may once have imposed.” Camarena v. Vanderbilt Mortg. & Fin., Inc., No. 15-CV-00656, 2015
WL 4036258, at *3 (N.D. Ill. July 1, 2015). Plaintiffs note in their motion that “[m]ost of the
evidence and proof in these matters is likely to be testimonial or scheduling and payroll documents
that . . . are easily accessible electronically,” Mem. Supp. Pls.’ Mot. Transfer 9, ECF No. 140, and
therefore this factor is a wash.
A party moving for transfer “has the burden of showing that the transferee forum is clearly
more convenient” and must “clearly specify the key witnesses to be called and make at least a
generalized statement of what their testimony” will include. Heller Fin., Inc. v. Midwhey Powder
Co. Inc., 883 F.2d 1286, 1293 (7th Cir. 1989) (internal quotation marks omitted). The convenience
of non-party witnesses is afforded greater weight than the convenience of parties. See Gueorguiev
v. Max Rave, LLC, 526 F. Supp. 2d 853, 858 (N.D. Ill. 2007). In their motion, the Tapp plaintiffs
refer generally to “current or former SkyWest employees and supervisors” as witnesses, “many of
whom are likely to be employed at its California bases or in St. George, Utah at SkyWest’s
headquarters.” Mem. Supp. Pls.’ Mot. Transfer 9, ECF No. 140. While plaintiffs correctly note
that the distance between Utah and California is shorter than that between Utah and Illinois, they
10
do not describe who, in particular, their key witnesses will be, and the Court expects that air travel
to either location will not be unduly burdensome—particularly for flight attendants and other
airline employees. Moreover, as Hirst and Wilson will continue to be litigated in separate districts
(unless SkyWest’s MDL motion is granted), SkyWest’s pay practices will be litigated in both
venues, and the location of Tapp will not materially change the (in)convenience the parties or
witnesses face. See Qurio Holdings, Inc. v. DIRECTV, LLC, No. 14-CV-7502, 2015 WL 1943278,
at *5 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 29, 2015) (holding that a difference in airline ticket costs, though not
insubstantial, would not unduly impact defendants’ efforts to mount a response and that plaintiffs’
claimed difficulties litigating in multiple districts were unavailing when plaintiffs chose to file
their cases in a district that was itself a significant distance to travel).
As for the interest of justice factors, that Hirst and Tapp have been pending in this Court
and this Circuit, and actively litigated, for almost four years cannot lightly be dismissed.
“Generally, a motion to transfer should be made early in the proceeding,” Bd. of Trustees of the
Auto. Mechanics’ Local No. 701 Union & Industry Welfare Fund v. Brown, No. 12-CV-10268,
2014 WL 4057367, at *4 (N.D. Ill. Aug. 14, 2014), as familiarity with both the procedural and
substantive aspects of the case is lost with a transfer to another court. And perhaps more
importantly, and as this matter illustrates, motions to transfer filed after significant rulings have
been made are more likely to be animated by forum shopping and to result in procedural jockeying
that delays the resolution of claims, increases the costs of litigation, and burdens judicial dockets.7
7
With respect to dockets, the parties note that the dockets of courts in the Northern District
of Illinois and the Northern District of California are relatively similar in terms of congestion, and
therefore this factor does not weigh heavily in either direction, see Mem. Supp. Pls.’ Mot. Transfer
11-12, ECF No. 140; Defs.’ Opp’n to Pls.’ Mot. Transfer 12, ECF No. 150. In any event, the
comparison between average case duration to the actual duration of the Hirst and Tapp cases is
inapt. Suffice to say that these putative class actions, involving legal issues all parties regard as
11
As SkyWest points out, this Court has developed substantial familiarity with SkyWest’s
compensation practices and the airline industry generally that weighs substantially against transfer.
The plaintiffs counter that this Court has no familiarity with the state wage laws on which the nonIllinois plaintiffs base their claims, but that is not entirely accurate. While it is true enough, as the
plaintiffs emphasize, that this Court has not yet resolved the merits of the claims under wage laws
of California, Arizona, or Washington, that does not mean that the Court has not reviewed relevant
state wage laws in the two rounds of briefing on motions to dismiss, or that they had no relevance
to the Court’s dismissal of the state law claims based on the Dormant Commerce Clause. See Mem.
Op. 23-28, ECF No. 107 (discussing Illinois, California, and Washington wage laws in the context
of evaluating burdens imposed on interstate commerce). Moreover, the canard that federal judges
have materially greater facility resolving claims based on the law of the state in which they sit is
oft-repeated but deserves little credence in an era of access to online research databases and
electronic dockets. Facing unfamiliar state law claims is business as usual in the federal courts and
warrants little, if any, weight in assessing whether the interest of justice favors the transfer of a
case to another district. We all have access to Westlaw.
The plaintiffs also argue that the similarity between the claims in Tapp and in Wilson, now
pending in the Northern District of California, should weigh in favor of transferring Tapp back to
California. As it stands, Tapp and Wilson share two claims: failure to provide itemized wage
statements under the California Labor Code and violations of the California Unfair Competition
Law. 8 See Claims Chart for Hirst, Tapp, and Wilson, ECF No. 140-2. If Tapp’s claims were solely
sufficiently weighty to seek certiorari after obtaining a mixed result in the Court of Appeals, are
not “average” cases in this District (nor, likely, in the Northern District of California).
8
If the Tapp plaintiffs were permitted to amend their complaint, they would have one
additional claim in common with Wilson, for a total of three out of ten claims. See Tapp Proposed
Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 181-89, Tapp ECF No. 125-1.
12
based on California law, the case for transfer might be stronger; however, Tapp includes Arizona
and Washington law claims, and simply being closer to California does not render these claims
more at home than they would be here. Cf. Lafleur, 2012 WL 2280090, at *6 (“Plaintiffs’ state
claims involve the wage and hour laws of [several states], such that any judge presiding over this
matter faces the same learning curve. Judges in either district are equally competent to preside over
these matters . . . .”). Given that plaintiffs’ claims arise under the laws of multiple states, the Court
does not find that a single local interest predominates in these cases, particularly as the incidents
alleged necessarily involve a great deal of travel.
In sum, the Court concludes that the plaintiffs have not shown that California is clearly
more convenient than Illinois to adjudicate the claims in Tapp. And because neither Hirst nor
Wilson can be transferred pursuant to § 1404(a), transferring Tapp will not significantly change
the circumstances under which SkyWest’s compensation structure is litigated; substantial
efficiencies and decisional consistency are most likely to be achieved if all three cases are handled
in the same forum. As noted at the outset, on this the parties, and this Court, agree. As that end
cannot be achieved by means of § 1404(a), however, the decision as to whether to consolidate
these cases and, if so, where, is for the JPML. To be clear, however, this Court views consolidation
of these cases to be of greater moment than the location of a consolidated proceeding.
Consolidation, whether in this District or the Northern District of California, is preferable to
proceeding in both.
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* * * * *
For the foregoing reasons, the plaintiffs’ motions to transfer are denied. The parties are
directed to proceed with the briefing schedules set for the plaintiffs’ motion for leave to file an
amended operative complaint and the defendants’ consolidated motion to dismiss.
John J. Tharp, Jr.
United States District Judge
Date: September 24, 2019
14
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