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Second Circuit Clarifies Factors to be Considered in Pleading a Joint Employer Relationship for Title VII Liability

Posted: March 22, 2022 | Ford Harrison Category: Title VII - General


Executive Summary
: On March 7, 2022, a sharply divided panel of the Second Circuit (covering New York, Connecticut, and Vermont) addressed the question of what a Title VII plaintiff must claim to adequately plead the existence of an employer-employee relationship under the joint employer doctrine. See Felder v. United States Tennis Association (2d Cir. 2022). Generally, a company is only liable for discrimination against employees and applicants for employment; however, if a company does not directly employ a person, it may be liable as a joint employer. Felder is the first time the Second Circuit has confronted the question of what factors must be alleged to adequately plead a joint-employment relationship. Over a vigorous dissent, the court joined its sister circuits and concluded that non-exhaustive factors drawn from the common law of agency, including control over an employee’s hiring, firing, training, promotion, discipline, supervision, and handling of records, insurance, and payroll, are relevant to this inquiry.

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