Kloppel v. Sears Holdings Corporation et al
Filing
31
ORDER denying 27 Motion to Strike ; granting 12 Motion to Dismiss; granting in part and denying in part 20 Motion to Dismiss. Signed by Hon. Frank P. Geraci, Jr. on 2/28/2018. (KAJ)-CLERK TO FOLLOW UP-
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
MIKE KLOPPEL and
WILSON ADAMS,
Plaintiffs,
Case # 17-CV-6296-FPG
v.
DECISION AND ORDER
SEARS HOLDINGS CORPORATION,
SEARS ROEBUCK & COMPANY, and
HOMEDELIVERYLINK, INC.,
Defendants.
INTRODUCTION
In this putative class action, Plaintiffs Mike Kloppel and Wilson Adams allege that
Defendants HomeDeliveryLink, Inc. (“HDL”), Sears Holdings Corporation, and Sears, Roebuck
and Co. (together, “Sears”) misclassified them as independent contractors rather than employees
and took illegal deductions from their pay while they performed delivery services for Defendants
in New York State.
Defendants move to dismiss Plaintiffs’ Complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 12(b)(6). ECF. Nos. 12, 20. Additionally, Plaintiffs move to strike part of Defendant
HDL’s reply brief. For the reasons stated below, Sears’ Motion to Dismiss is GRANTED in full
and HomeDeliveryLink’s Motion to Dismiss is DENIED in part and GRANTED in part.
Plaintiffs’ Motion to Strike is DENIED in full.
1
BACKGROUND 1
Plaintiffs, along with other similarly situated individuals they seek to represent, delivered
Sears merchandise to customers’ homes throughout New York State. Plaintiffs contracted with
Defendant HDL, a third party logistics provider, rather than directly with Defendant Sears.
Plaintiffs allege that Defendant HDL treated them as independent contractors even though they
were rightfully employees under New York law. They further allege that Defendant HDL
unlawfully deducted “certain expenses directly from the compensation it [paid to Plaintiffs],
including when HDL determine[d], in its sole discretion, that a delivery ha[d] been made in a
manner it deem[ed] to be unsatisfactory (e.g., damaged goods, damage to customer property).”
ECF No. 9 at 7. HDL “would also deduct other expenses from the compensation it pa[id] such as
the cost of truck rental and fuel,” and “the costs of workers’ compensation insurance and general
liability insurance from the compensation it paid to” Plaintiffs. Id. Finally, Plaintiffs allege that
“Defendants failed to furnish Plaintiff[s] . . . with an accurate statement of wages listing hours
worked, rates paid, gross wages, allowances, deductions taken, and net wages paid.” Id.
DISCUSSION
I.
Legal Standard
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) provides that a party may move to dismiss a
complaint for “failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).
In reviewing a motion to dismiss, a court “must accept as true all of the factual allegations
contained in the complaint,” Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 572 (2007), and “draw all
reasonable inferences in Plaintiff’s favor.” Faber v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 648 F.3d 98, 104 (2d Cir.
2011). To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted
1
The following allegations are taken from Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint (ECF No. 10) and are accepted as true to
evaluate Defendants’ motions to dismiss.
2
as true, to “state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.” Twombly, 550 U.S. at 570. A claim
is facially plausible “when the plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the
reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556
U.S. 662, 678 (2009). The application of this standard is “a context-specific task that requires the
reviewing court to draw on its judicial experience and common sense.” Id. at 679.
II.
Defendant HDL’s Motion to Dismiss
A.
The Fair Play Act
Plaintiffs argue that under the New York State Commercial Goods Transportation Industry
Fair Play Act (“Fair Play Act”), N.Y. Lab. Law § 862-b, they were rightfully employees and not,
as Defendant HDL labeled them, independent contractors. HDL’s wage deductions and failure to
provide wage statements therefore violated several New York labor laws.
The Fair Play Act, which became effective in New York on April 10, 2014, requires an
employer to classify “[a]ny person performing commercial goods transportation services for a
commercial goods transportation contractor . . . as an employee,” and not as an independent
contractor. N.Y. Lab. Law § 862-b(1). There is an exception to this presumption if the employer
demonstrates that the worker: 1) is free from control and direction over the performance of his
work; 2) performs work that is outside the usual course of business or is outside all of the
employer’s places of business, unless the employer contracts with third parties to place employees;
and 3) is in an independently established trade, occupation, profession, or business. N.Y. Lab. Law
§ 862-b(1)(a-c). If the employer can demonstrate that a worker satisfies all three conditions, it
may treat him as an independent contractor instead of as an employee. Consequently, the worker
will not enjoy N.Y. Lab. Law §§ 198-b and 193’s protections from wage deductions because those
3
laws only apply to employees. For the same reason, the worker is not entitled to a wage statement
under N.Y. Lab. Law § 195.
Even if an employer cannot satisfy the above three-prong test, the Fair Play Act provides
an additional test through which an employer may establish that a worker is an independent
contractor: the “separate business entity” test. N.Y. Lab. Law § 862-b(2)(a-k). If the employer can
establish that the worker meets all eleven factors of the separate business entity test, including that
the worker or “business entity” owns or leases the “capital goods and gains the profits and bears
the losses of the business entity” and “has the right to perform similar services for others on
whatever basis and whenever it chooses,” the employer may deem the business entity an
independent contractor. Id. Again, N.Y. Lab. Law §§ 198-b, 193, and 195 would not protect the
business entity.
B.
Preemption
Defendant HDL argues that the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act
(“FAAAA”) expressly preempts the Fair Play Act. Plaintiffs argue in response that the FAAAA’s
preemption clause does not cover the Fair Play Act.
A defendant must plead and prove the affirmative defense of federal preemption. See Met.
Life Ins. Co. v. Taylor, 481 U.S. 58, 63 (1987) (“Federal pre-emption is ordinarily a federal defense
to the plaintiff’s suit.”). The court may resolve the issue of preemption on a motion to dismiss if
the facts necessary to determine the issue clearly appear on the face of the complaint. Fed. R. Civ.
P. 12(b)(6). The defendant need not present empirical evidence for the court to find preemption,
but the defendant should demonstrate the real and logical effects of the state statute from which
the court may find that the statute is preempted. Mass. Delivery Ass’n v. Coakley, 769 F.3d 11, 20
(1st Cir. 2014); Costello v. BeavEx, Inc., 810 F.3d 1045, 1055 (7th Cir. 2016).
4
1.
Background and Language of the FAAAA
In 1980, Congress deregulated the trucking industry to promote competition, and in 1994,
it passed the FAAA to avoid “a patchwork of state-service determining laws.” Rowe v. N.H. Motor
Transp. Ass’n, 552 U.S. 364, 367, 373 (2008). Congress’s “overarching goal” for passing the
FAAAA was to help “ensure transportation rates, routes and services” reflected “maximum
reliance on competitive market forces,” thereby stimulating “efficiency, innovation, and low
prices.” Id. at 371.
The FAAAA’s preemption clause, which borrows language from the Airline Deregulation
Act of 1978 (“ADA”), reads: “[A] State . . . may not enact or enforce a law . . . related to a price,
route, or service of any motor carrier . . . with respect to the transportation of property.” Id. at 368
(quoting 49 U.S.C. § 14501(c)(1)). The Supreme Court has defined the phrase “related to” in the
ADA as “having a connection with or reference to.” Morales v. TWA, 504 U.S. 374, 384 (1992).
In Rowe, the Court clarified that its interpretation of the language in the ADA’s preemption clause
applied to the identical language of the FAAAA’s preemption clause. See Rowe 552 U.S. at 370
(2008). Putting it all together, the Court in Rowe determined that the FAAAA preempts state
“‘enforcement actions having a connection with, or reference to,’ carrier ‘rates, routes, or services
. . .’” Id. (quoting Morales, 504 U.S. at 384). The connection need not be direct: preemption “may
occur even if a state law’s effect on rates, routes or services is only indirect.” Id.
The Supreme Court’s interpretation of the FAAAA’s preemption clause is broad but not
limitless: in Morales, the Court recognized that the FAAA preempts only those laws that have an
at least “significant effect” on fares, routes and services. Morales, 504 U.S. at 390. The FAA does
not preempt state laws “that affect [fares, routes, or services] in only a ‘tenuous, remote or
peripheral . . . manner.” Id. Examples of such state laws include zoning regulations and gambling
5
prohibitions. See Rowe, 552 U.S. at 371; Dan’s City Used Cars, Inc. v. Pelkey, 569 U.S. 251, 264
(2013). The Supreme Court has not encountered a case involving FAAAA preemption of state
labor laws, but two Circuit Courts have ruled on cases similar to the one at bar and reached opposite
conclusions.
2.
The First Circuit’s FAAAA Preemption Analysis
In Schwann v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc., 813 F.3d 429, 438 (1st Cir. 2016), the
First Circuit held that the FAAAA preempted a three-prong Massachusetts independent contractor
test. The disputed Massachusetts test mandated that any worker who did not provide services
“outside the usual course of the business of the employer” be treated as an employee and not an
independent contractor. Id. at 433 (quoting Mass. Gen. Laws § 148B(a)(2)). The Schwann court
noted that the disputed Massachusetts independent contractor test “stands as something of an
anomaly because it makes any person who performs a service within the usual course of the
enterprise’s business an employee for state wage law purposes,” whereas under federal labor law
“and the law of many states, the relationship between the service performed and the usual course
of the enterprise’s business is simply one among many factors to be considered.” Id.
Additionally, under Massachusetts law, once a worker is deemed an employee, the
employer “must provide certain benefits to its employees, including various days off, . . . parental
leave, . . . work-break benefits, . . . and a minimum wage . . .” Id. The Schwann court also found
it significant that an employer could not contract around the Massachusetts independent contractor
test. Id. (“The statute also bars the employer from excepting itself from this mandate by contract.”)
The combined effect of the Massachusetts law’s characteristics mandated that employers
use their own employees rather than “procure the services of an independent contractor.” Id. at
438. The First Circuit reasoned that this effect posed “a serious potential impediment to the
6
achievement of the FAAAA’s objectives [of free competition and national uniformity] because a
court, rather than the market participant, would ultimately determine what services that company
provides and how it chooses to provide them.” Id. The Massachusetts law would have prevented
FedEx, the defendant in Schwann, from using independent contractors, which in turn would “have
a significant impact on the actual routes [FedEx drivers] followed for the pick-up and delivery of
packages.” Id. at 439. The Massachusetts law therefore had “a connection with” FedEx’s rates
and services, placing it squarely within the target of the FAAAA’s preemption clause.
3.
Seventh Circuit’s FAAAA Preemption Analysis
In Costello v. BeavEx, 810 F.3d 1045, 1050 (7th Cir. 2016), the Seventh Circuit found that
the FAAAA did not preempt the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act (“IWPCA”), a state
labor law. Although the Seventh Circuit used the same analysis 2 that the First Circuit used 3 in
Schwann, the facts of the case and the narrower scope of the state labor law mandated a different
result. See id. at 1056 (“Because the scope of the IWPCA is limited, its logical effect is necessarily
more limited than the [Massachusetts] statute . . .”). The BeavEx court noted three specific
distinctions between the IWPCA and the Massachusetts law at-issue in Schwann.
First, unlike in Massachusetts, deeming a worker an employee as opposed to an
independent contractor does not require an employer to comply with a “slew of” other “state laws.”
Id. at 1056. Second, unlike in Massachusetts, employers in Illinois may contract around “the
2
Unlike the Schwann court, the BeavEx court stressed that laws affecting “the way a carrier interacts with its customers
falls squarely within the scope of FAAAA preemption,” while laws “that merely govern a carrier’s relationship with
its workforce, however, are often too tenuously connected to the carrier’s relationship with its consumers to warrant
preemption.” BeavEx, 810 F.3d at 1055. To support this proposition, the court cited Morales, 504 U.S. at 388
(preempting state-law claim because “it would give consumers a cause of action . . . for an airline’s failure to provide
a particular advertised price,”) and Rowe, 552 U.S. at 372 (preempting a state law that determined “the services that
motor carrier will provide” to their customers).
3
The Schwann court acknowledged that its decision did not contradict the BeavEx decision because the Seventh
Circuit “distinguished the Massachusetts statute . . . from the Illinois statute before it in holding that the latter was not
preempted by the FAAAA.” Schwann, 813 F.3d at 440 n.8.
7
IWPCA’s prohibition on deductions from wages” so long as the employee has freely consented in
writing. Id. at 1057. This allowance is significant because in Northwest, Inc. v. Ginsberg, the
Supreme Court found that the ADA 4 did not preempt a state claim because the parties “were free
to contract around those rules.” 134 S. Ct. 1422, 1433 (2014). Citing Northwest, the BeavEx court
stressed that the defendant employer was free to contract around the IWPCA’s deduction
prohibition and had not “demonstrated to [the] court that preventing it from deducting from its
[employees’] wages or the transaction costs associated with acquiring consent to do so would have
a significant impact related to its prices, routes, or services.” BeavEx, 810 F.3d at 1056.
Third, while the defendant employer in Schwann demonstrated the impact of the
Massachusetts law on its business model and services, the defendant in BeavEx did not offer
“specific evidence of the effect of the IWPCA on its business model, instead preferring to rely on
conclusory allegations that compliance with the IWCPA will require BeavEx to switch its entire
business model from independent-contractor-based to employee-based.” Id. The BeavEx court
saw “no basis for concluding that the IWPCA would require that change given that the federal
employment laws and other [Illinois] labor laws have different tests for employment status.” Id.
For example, unlike in Massachusetts, an employer could deem a worker in Illinois an
employee for the purposes of the IWPCA’s wage deduction prohibition, but that worker would not
necessarily be an “employee for purposes of the Illinois Minimum Wage Law,” which uses a
different test than the IWPCA to determine if an individual is an independent contractor. Id. at
1057. On the other hand, the First Circuit found in Schwann that “if an employer were compelled
to treat its drivers as employees under that state law, the resulting constellation of employment
regulations would ‘largely foreclose’ FedEx’s preferred method of providing delivery services.”
4
As discussed earlier in this opinion, the ADA is analogous to the FAAAA. See Rowe, 552 U.S. at 370.
8
See Brief for the United States as Amicus Curiae at p. 19, BeavEx, Inc. v. Costello, 137 S. Ct. 2289
(2017) (No. 15-1305).
4.
Analysis: Effects of the Fair Play Act
Defendant HDL has not provided the facts necessary for the Court to determine at this time
that the FAAAA preempts Plaintiffs’ claims. The crucial inquiry in BeavEx and Schwann was
whether the relevant state laws forced the defendant employer to switch its business model from
independent contractor-based to employee-based.
Defendant HDL fails to allege—even in a
conclusory manner like the BeavEx defendant—that the Fair Play Act would force it to switch its
business model from independent contractor-based to employee-based.
HDL merely cites
Schwann for the proposition that whether “to provide a service directly, with one’s own employee,
or to procure the services of an independent contractor is a significant decision in designing and
running a business.” ECF No. 21 at 9 (quoting Schwann, 813 F.3d at 438). HDL does not
acknowledge BeavEx or discuss the effects that the Fair Play Act would have on its routes, services,
or rates.
The Fair Play Act appears to be a substantially narrower law than that at-issue in Schwann.
Although the initial three-prong test for determining if a worker is an employee is similar 5 to the
test in Massachusetts, an employer can still treat a worker as an independent contractor even if the
worker fails the three-prong test, provided the employer can demonstrate that the worker is a
“separate business entity” under the law’s 11-factor test. N.Y.Lab. Law § 862-b(2). Additionally,
unlike in Massachusetts, employers in New York can contract around the law prohibiting wage
5
Both the Fair Play Act and the Massachusetts law in Schwann dictate that a worker must perform a service outside
the usual course of the employer’s business to be labeled an independent contractor. Compare Mass. Gen. Laws §
148B(a) (“an individual performing any service . . . shall be considered to be an employee . . . unless . . . the service
is performed outside the usual course of the business of the employer . . .) with N.Y. Lab. Law § 862-b(1)(b) (requiring
that the worker’s “service . . . be performed outside the usual course of business” for the worker to be an independent
contractor).
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deductions. N.Y.Lab. Law § 193(1)(b) (“No employer shall make any deduction from the wages
of an employee, except deductions which . . . are expressly authorized in writing by the employee
and are for the benefit of the employee.”) While the Illinois law in BeavEx does not require that
deductions be for the employee’s benefit, New York law is more favorable to employers than the
Massachusetts law in Schwann, which did not allow employers to contract around the wage
deduction prohibition in any circumstances.
Finally, unlike the disputed law in Schwann, it is not evident that the Fair Play Act triggers
an entire host of other regulations, including “various days off, . . . parental leave, . . . work-break
benefits, . . . and a minimum wage.” Schwann, 813 F.3d at 433. Although other facts may emerge
during discovery, at this stage of the litigation there is no indication that the Fair Play Act would
have a significant effect on HDL’s rates, routes, or services. See Abdu-Brisson v. Delta Airlines,
Inc., 128 F.3d 77, 84 (2d Cir. 1997) (acknowledging that there are some cases “where preemption
cannot be easily determined from the pleadings.”)
5.
Analysis: The Fair Play Act’s Reference to Services
While Defendant HDL has not demonstrated that the Fair Play Act has a significant effect
on its rates, routes, or services, it argues that it need not do so when “the state law at issue
‘expressly refers to [motor carrier] rates, routes or services.’” ECF No. 26 at 8 (quoting EagleMed,
LLC v. Cox, 868 F.3d 893, 902 (10th Cir. 2017)). The FAAAA indeed preempts state laws that
explicitly refer to rates, routes, or services regardless of the state law’s effect on those three things,
see Morales, 504 U.S. at 384, but the Fair Play Act is no such law.
10
That the Fair Play Act references rates, routes, or services “could not be more clear” to
Defendant HDL because the law uses the word “services” 14 times. 6 ECF No. 21 at 9. HDL urges
the Court to find the statute preempted merely because it uses the word “services.” Id. But Second
Circuit case law does not support HDL’s unduly semantic and formalistic argument. In Air
Transport Ass’n of America, Inc. v. Cuomo, 520 F.3d 218, 220 (2nd Cir. 2008), the Second Circuit
held that the ADA 7 preempted New York State’s Passenger Bill of Rights (“PBR”), which required
airlines to provide passengers who “have boarded an aircraft and are delayed more than three hours
on the aircraft with . . . electric generation service[,] . . . waste removal service . . . for on-board
restrooms[,] and” food and drinks. (emphasis added). The Second Circuit did not hold that the
ADA preempted New York’s PBR simply because it used the word “service.” Instead, the court
first decided whether the provision of electricity, refreshments, and restrooms constituted
“services.” Id. at 222. The court determined that “food, water, electricity, and restrooms” were
services, but it ignored the fact that the PBR used the word “services” in making that determination.
Then, the court determined that the ultimate inquiry in determining whether a state law
referred to “rates, routes or services” was whether the law “directly . . . regulate[d] carrier
services.” Id. at 223. (quoting Rowe, 552 U.S. at 476). The court found the PBR preempted
because it directly regulated airline services such as refreshments and electricity—not simply
because it used the word “services.” See id.
The Fair Play Act, on the other hand, does not directly regulate HDL’s services. The
statute’s use of the word “services” is incidental—the law’s real targets are the people performing
6
The Act’s 14 references to services include: “any person performing commercial goods transportation services” and
“the individual is customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, profession or business that
is similar to the service at issue . . .” N.Y. Lab. Law § 862-b.
7
As discussed earlier in this opinion, the ADA is analogous to the FAAAA. See Rowe, 552 U.S. at 370.
11
those commercial goods transportation services, and not the services themselves. By contrast, in
the cases HDL uses to support its argument that the Fair Play Act “refers to” services—including
Morales, Rowe, and EagleMed—the preempted state statutes attempted to regulate rates, routes,
or services directly. See, e.g. Morales, 504 U.S. at 388 (finding preempted a Texas statute that,
among other things, gave consumers a cause of action for an airline’s failure to provide a particular
advertised fare); EagleMed, 868 F.3d at 904 (finding preempted Wyoming law’s establishing fixed
“maximum reimbursement rates for air-ambulance carriers”); Rowe, 552 U.S. at 992 (finding
preempted a Maine law “regulating delivery service procedures”). The Fair Play Act, however, is
a “labor law, which regulates the motor carrier as an employer, [and] is often too ‘remote’ to
warrant FAAAA preemption.” BeavEx, 810 F.3d at 1054.
For the reasons stated above, Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ N.Y. Lab. Law §
862-b claim is DENIED, but the Court may revisit the preemption issue in later stages of this
litigation.
III.
Sears’ Motion to Dismiss
Because Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint relates solely to Defendant HDL’s conduct, and
not to Defendant Sears’ conduct, Plaintiffs have no claim for relief against Sears. Plaintiffs
concede that “Sears is not alleged to have directly participated in [HDL’s] alleged violations,” but
argue that Sears is liable for HDL’s conduct as Plaintiffs’ “joint employer” with HDL. ECF No.
23 at 7. Plaintiffs argue that, as their “joint employer,” Sears is liable for their New York labor
law claims. Id. at 8. The Court disagrees.
A “finding that two companies are an employee’s ‘joint employers’ only affects each
employer’s liability to the employee for their own actions, not for each other’s actions.” Amaya v.
Garden City Irrigation, Inc., 645 F. Supp. 2d 116, 122-23 (E.D.N.Y. 2009). According to the
12
Plaintiffs’ own complaint, HDL is the only defendant that improperly deducted from Plaintiffs’
paychecks and withheld wage statements. Plaintiffs fail to allege that Sears knew of or participated
in HDL’s alleged illegal acts. Absent any such allegation, the Court cannot impute HDL’s conduct
to Sears. See Sosa, No. 12 Civ. 8926(NRB), 2013 WL 6569913, at *3 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 13, 2013)
(granting defendant’s motion to dismiss a Title VII claim because “the conduct of one [joint]
employer cannot necessarily be imputed to the other”). Accordingly, Defendant Sears’ Motion to
Dismiss Plaintiffs’ labor law claims is GRANTED.
IV.
Plaintiffs’ Unjust Enrichment Claim against Both Defendants
Plaintiffs raise an unjust enrichment claim against both Defendants based on the same
underlying factual allegations as their labor law claims. Because the unjust enrichment claim is
entirely duplicative, 8 it is DISMISSED as to both defendants. See Nelson v. MillerCoors, LLC,
246 F. Supp. 3d 666 (E.D.N.Y. 2017) (“Even pleaded in the alternative, claims for unjust
enrichment will not survive a motion to dismiss where plaintiffs fail to explain how their unjust
enrichment claim is not merely duplicative of their other causes of action.”).
V.
Plaintiffs’ Motion to Strike
Plaintiffs move to strike one of the arguments in Defendant HDL’s reply brief, stating that
“HDL’s argument that the only state laws not preempted by the FAAAA are expressly defined in
the FAAAA’s list of exceptions” was raised for the first time in HDL’s reply brief. HDL made
that argument, however, in reply to Plaintiffs’ arguments in opposition to HDL’s Motion to
8
Although the Court allowed an unjust enrichment claim to move forward in a similar case, Padovano v. FedEx
Ground Packags Sys., 16-CV-17-FPG, 2016 WL 7056574, at *16 (W.D.N.Y. Dec. 5, 2016), the defendant there did
not argue that the plaintiff’s unjust enrichment claim entirely duplicated other claims. Since Padovano, other courts
within the Second Circuit have clarified that alternative unjust enrichment claims should be dismissed if they are based
on the same facts as other claims.
13
Dismiss. Because a reply brief responds to issues that the opposing party raised, HDL did not err.
Plaintiffs’ Motion to Strike is therefore DENIED.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, Defendant HDL’s Motion to Dismiss (ECF No. 20) is
DENIED as to Plaintiffs’ New York Labor Law claims, but GRANTED as to Plaintiffs’ unjust
enrichment claim. Defendant Sears’ Motion to Dismiss (ECF No. 12) is GRANTED in full, and
the case against Defendant Sears is DISMISSED. The Clerk of Court is directed to terminate
Defendants Sears Holdings Corporation and Sears, Roebuck & Company as parties to this action.
Plaintiffs’ Motion to Strike (ECF No. 27) is DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated: February 28, 2018
Rochester, New York
______________________________________
HON. FRANK P. GERACI, JR.
Chief Judge
United States District Court
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