Lopez-Santos v. Metropolitan Security Services ( 2020 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 18-1694
    RAFAEL LÓPEZ-SANTOS and ERASMO DOMENA-RÍOS,
    Plaintiffs, Appellants,
    v.
    METROPOLITAN SECURITY SERVICES,
    Defendant, Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. Francisco A. Besosa, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Thompson, Lipez, and Barron,
    Circuit Judges.
    Judith Berkan, with whom Mary Jo Mendez and Berkan/Mendez
    were on brief, for appellants.
    Luis R. Pérez-Giusti, with whom Liana M. Gutiérrez-Irizarry,
    Adsuar Muñiz Goyco, and Seda & Pérez-Ochoa, P.S.C., were on brief,
    for appellee.
    July 23, 2020
    LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.            Appellants Rafael López-Santos
    ("López")    and    Erasmo    Domena-Ríos      ("Domena")   served     as   court
    security officers for the District of Puerto Rico for thirty-two
    years.     Their tenures ended in 2015 when appellee Metropolitan
    Security Services d/b/a Walden Security ("Walden") assumed the
    federal    contract   to     provide   courthouse     security    services    and
    refused to hire them because they lacked certification from a law
    enforcement training academy.          After López and Domena brought suit
    for statutory separation pay pursuant to Puerto Rico Law 80, the
    district court granted summary judgment for Walden.
    On appeal, López and Domena argue that the district court
    conducted the wrong legal analysis and that Walden should be held
    liable pursuant to Puerto Rico's common law successor employer
    doctrine.    We agree that the district court misconstrued López and
    Domena's theory of liability, leading it to conduct a largely
    irrelevant analysis of their claims, but we nevertheless affirm.
    Although    we     recognize    the     unfortunate    loss      of   livelihood
    experienced by López and Domena, the successor employer doctrine
    is simply inapplicable to their case, leaving them with no remedy
    pursuant to Law 80.
    I.
    The following facts are undisputed by the parties. López
    and Domena both began work as court security officers ("CSOs") in
    1983.     They were among the original thirteen CSOs serving the
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    District of Puerto Rico and received multiple accolades for their
    excellent work.
    The United States Marshals Service ("USMS") drafts and
    manages the federal contract governing court security services for
    the District of Puerto Rico.         The USMS awards the contract to
    private security companies, and those companies in turn hire CSOs
    to provide the District of Puerto Rico courthouses with armed
    security guard services.     During the thirty-two years that López
    and Domena worked as CSOs, a number of different private security
    companies held the USMS contract at various times, and López and
    Domena worked for all of those companies.
    In September 2015, the USMS awarded the contract to
    Walden, effective December 1, 2015.          The contract set forth the
    minimum   qualifications    for    CSOs    employed   by   the   contractor.
    Specifically, it stated:
    [E]ach individual designated to perform as a
    CSO [shall] ha[ve] successfully completed or
    graduated from a certified Federal, state,
    county, local or military law enforcement
    training academy or program that provided
    instruction on the use of police powers in an
    armed capacity while dealing with the public.
    The certificate shall be recognized by a
    Federal, state, county, local or military
    authority, and provide evidence that an
    individual is eligible for employment as a law
    enforcement officer.
    The record demonstrates that this same language had appeared in
    the   USMS's   contract   with    Akal    Security,   Inc.   ("Akal"),   the
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    contractor immediately preceding Walden, as well as the contract
    with MVM Security ("MVM"), the contractor immediately preceding
    Akal.
    In October 2015, Walden convened two meetings for all of
    the CSOs who were then employed by Akal.              During the meetings,
    Walden      provided   information   about     its   company   policies   and
    benefits and invited all of Akal's CSOs to submit employment
    applications     to    Walden.   López   and    Domena   attended    Walden's
    meetings and submitted applications.         However, neither of them had
    completed or graduated from a certified law enforcement training
    academy, as required by the USMS contract with Walden.              This fact
    was reflected in their applications, both of which requested a
    waiver of the certification requirement.
    On November 30, 2015, the Vice President of Walden's
    Federal Services Division notified López and Domena that they were
    ineligible for Walden's CSO positions because they failed to
    satisfy the certificate requirement.           They were the only two Akal
    CSOs not hired by Walden.        As of December 1, 2015, they were out
    of a job.1
    1
    It is not clear why the lack of certification did not become
    an issue when López and Domena were hired by Akal and MVM, but
    there is no evidence in the record suggesting that anyone ever
    questioned the qualifications of López and Domena during the
    fourteen years that MVM held the USMS contract, and the two to
    three years that Akal held the contract.
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    Thereafter, López and Domena, along with other members
    of   the   courthouse   community,   tried   to   dissuade   Walden   from
    enforcing the certification requirement against them.            Roberto
    Santiago, the site supervisor under both Akal and Walden, spoke
    with Walden representatives about López and Domena's extensive
    experience and stellar employment records, demonstrating that they
    had "the sufficient skills and knowledge to be CSOs."         Then-Chief
    Judge Aida M. Delgado-Colón and Judge Carmen Consuelo Cerezo asked
    the USMS to waive the certificate requirement for López and Domena
    in light of their long history of impeccable service.2
    After all of those efforts failed, López and Domena filed
    the instant lawsuit for statutory separation pay pursuant to Puerto
    Rico Law 80, invoking the federal district court's diversity
    jurisdiction.    See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (a)(1), (e).     In November 2017,
    the parties filed cross motions for summary judgment, agreeing
    that the relevant facts were not in dispute.         The district court
    granted Walden's motion, reasoning that Law 80 did not apply to
    López and Domena's claims. See López-Santos v. Metro. Sec. Servs.,
    2In a letter to Judge Cerezo, the USMS took the position that
    because López and Domena were employees of Walden and not the USMS,
    the USMS would not instruct Walden to waive the certificate
    requirement; rather, Walden would have to affirmatively request
    that the USMS waive the requirement. At oral argument, counsel
    for Walden represented that Walden never asked the USMS for a
    waiver because Walden did not interpret the contract as permitting
    such a waiver. López and Domena dispute that interpretation of
    the contract, but the dispute is not material to our analysis.
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    Inc., 
    320 F. Supp. 3d 338
    , 343-44 (D.P.R. 2018).   López and Domena
    timely appealed.
    II.
    A.   Legal Framework
    We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, construing
    the record in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
    See Lapointe v. Silko Motor Sales, Inc., 
    926 F.3d 52
    , 54 (1st Cir.
    2019).    As a federal court sitting in diversity jurisdiction, we
    must apply state substantive law to assess whether summary judgment
    is appropriate.    See Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 
    304 U.S. 64
    , 78-
    79 (1938).    Accordingly, Puerto Rico law governs the substantive
    issues in this appeal.     See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (e) (treating the
    Commonwealth of Puerto Rico as a state for purposes of diversity
    jurisdiction).
    Puerto Rico Law 80 imposes a monetary penalty, commonly
    known as the "mesada," on employers who discharge employees without
    "just cause."    See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 29, § 185a (2015)3 ("Every
    3All citations to Law 80 are to the version of the law in
    effect in 2015 when Walden refused to hire López and Domena. Law
    80 was amended in significant ways in 2017, but the amendment does
    not contain a statement of retroactivity, see P.R. Laws Ann. tit.
    29, §§ 185a-185n (added on Jan. 26, 2017, No. 4), nor do the
    parties suggest that it should be applied retroactively.      See,
    e.g., Hughes Aircraft Co. v. U.S. ex rel. Schumer, 
    520 U.S. 939
    ,
    946 (1997) (applying the "time-honored presumption" against
    retroactivity where "[n]othing in the [statutory] amendment
    evidences a clear intent by Congress that it be applied
    retroactively, and no one suggests otherwise").
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    employee in commerce, industry, or any other business or workplace
    .   .   .   in    which   he/she   works    for    compensation     of   any   kind,
    contracted without a fixed term, who is discharged from his/her
    employment without just cause, shall be entitled to receive from
    his/her employer, in addition to the salary he/she may have earned:
    [various forms of compensation]."); Otero-Burgos v. Inter Am.
    Univ., 
    558 F.3d 1
    , 7-8 (1st Cir. 2009) (describing the "mesada"
    and the operation of Law 80).          In this manner, Law 80 modifies the
    concept     of    "at-will"    employment,        which    traditionally   permits
    employers to dismiss employees who do not have a contract for a
    fixed term "for any reason or no reason at all." See Otero-Burgos,
    
    558 F.3d at 7
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Because Law 80 provides compensation for "discharge
    without just cause," a plaintiff invoking Law 80's protection must,
    as a general rule, demonstrate as a threshold matter that he or
    she had an employment relationship with the defendant entity and
    that the defendant entity terminated that relationship through a
    "discharge."        See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 29, §§ 185a, 185e (emphasis
    added).     However, there are two exceptions to this requirement.
    First, pursuant to Article 6 of Law 80, after the sale
    of a business, "[i]n the event that the new acquirer chooses not
    to continue with the services of all or any of the employees and
    hence does not become their employer, the former employer shall be
    liable      for    the    [mesada]."       See    id.     § 185f.    Under     those
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    circumstances, although the seller did not technically "discharge"
    the employee -- rather, the seller failed to protect the employee
    in the contract of sale, and the acquirer subsequently declined to
    hire the individual -- the seller is liable to pay the mesada
    pursuant to Article 6.    See id.
    Under the second exception, known as the "successor
    employer doctrine" and developed through Puerto Rico common law,
    the acquirer rather than the seller is liable for the mesada.            See
    Rodríguez Oquendo v. Petrie Retail Inc. D.I.P., 
    167 P.R. Dec. 509
    ,
    __ P.R. Offic. Trans. __ (2006).      Pursuant to this doctrine, if an
    employer   unjustly   terminates    one    of   its   employees   and   then
    transfers the business to a new entity through a sale of assets or
    a merger, the previously discharged employee may hold the acquirer
    liable for the mesada, even though it was the predecessor entity
    that was actually responsible for the unjust discharge.            See 
    id.
    Thus, the successor employer doctrine permits a plaintiff to seek
    the mesada from an entity with which the plaintiff never had any
    employment relationship at all.
    B.   The District Court Decision
    Both before the district court and on appeal, López and
    Domena have consistently invoked the successor employer doctrine
    as their theory of liability.       They concede that they were never
    "discharged" by Walden, given that Walden never hired them in the
    first place, and thus Walden cannot be liable under the traditional
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    Law 80 analysis. They also explicitly disclaim reliance on Article
    6 of Law 80, acknowledging that the plain text of Article 6
    requires a sale of a business.      There was no such sale from Akal
    to Walden.
    Yet the district court limited its analysis to the issues
    conceded and disclaimed by López and Domena.         Specifically, it
    granted summary judgment to Walden because Walden was never López
    and Domena's "employer" and thus never discharged them,4          and
    because Article 6 of Law 80 does not apply to their case because
    there was no sale of a business from Akal to Walden.       See López-
    Santos, 320 F. Supp. 3d at 343-44.    In doing so, the district court
    ignored the only theory of liability that López and Domena actually
    do advance:     the successor employer doctrine.     This legal error
    requires us to decide whether to remand for the district court to
    conduct the proper analysis or to conduct our own legal analysis
    of the successor employer doctrine's applicability in the first
    instance, given the principle that we may affirm a grant of summary
    4 López and Domena argue to us that the district court's
    analysis of whether Walden was ever their "employer" improperly
    relied on definitions of "employer" and "employee" that were added
    to Law 80 by the Labor Reform Act in 2017. For the reasons stated
    in footnote 3, we agree.      However, this particular error is
    immaterial, given the district court's larger error.           Put
    differently, the district court's misplaced reliance on these new
    statutory definitions only came into play in a portion of the
    district court's analysis that we find irrelevant.
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    judgment on any ground supported by the record.            See Robinson v.
    Town of Marshfield, 
    950 F.3d 21
    , 24 (1st Cir. 2020).
    We elect the latter approach.           Because there are no
    material   factual   disputes,   our    analysis   is   purely   legal   and
    requires no further factfinding by the district court.             Moreover,
    the successor employer doctrine is so clearly inapplicable to López
    and Domena's case that any remand to the district court would be
    futile, resulting in a waste of the parties' resources.
    C.    Application of Successor Employer Doctrine
    López and Domena's theory of liability based on the
    successor employer doctrine fails for two distinct reasons. First,
    the   successor   employer   doctrine    is   applicable    only    where   a
    plaintiff seeks to hold the successor entity liable for a Law 80
    violation by the predecessor entity.          See Rodríguez Oquendo, 
    167 P.R. Dec. 509
     (citing Piñeiro v. Int'l Air Serv. of P.R., Inc.,
    
    140 P.R. Dec. 343
    , 40 P.R. Offic. Trans. __ (1996), which held a
    successor employer liable pursuant to Law 80 for dismissals that
    took place five months prior to the transfer of the business); see
    also 
    id.
     (explaining that the successor employer doctrine allows
    a plaintiff "to hold an entity liable for the unfair practices
    committed by another" (quoting L.R.B. v. Club Náutico, 
    97 P.R. 376
    , 390 (1969)).     But here López and Domena do not take issue
    with any action by Akal, the prior entity.              Rather, they cite
    Walden's failure to hire them as the triggering event for their
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    Law 80 claim.      Thus, the successor employer doctrine simply does
    not apply to the situation at bar.
    If that were not enough, the successor employer doctrine
    is also applicable only where "an employer . . . replaces another
    through a transfer of assets or a corporate merger."                 Id.; see
    also 
    id.
     (holding that the successorship doctrine applies to the
    transfer of assets in a federal bankruptcy proceeding, even if
    free of liens).     In this case, López and Domena concede that Akal
    did not sell a business to Walden -- indeed, Akal and Walden had
    no relationship with one another other than the fact that they
    happened to win the USMS contract in consecutive terms.              For this
    reason as well, Walden cannot be liable under the successor
    employer doctrine.
    López    and   Domena's     arguments   to    the    contrary   are
    unavailing.     First, they invoke the multifactor test used to
    determine whether the successor business "replaced" the former
    business, a requirement for the imposition of successor liability
    under the successor employer doctrine.        See 
    id.
     (holding that the
    successor business has "replaced" the former business when there
    is   "a   substantial     similarity     . . . 'in      the    operation   and
    continuity of the identity of the enterprise before and after the
    change'" (quoting L.R.B. v. Cooperativa Azucarera, 
    98 P.R. 307
    ,
    316 (1970)).    The factors examined by Puerto Rico courts include:
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    (1)   [T]he   existence   of   a   substantial
    continuation in the same business activity;
    (2) the utilization of the same operating
    plant; (3) the employment of the same or
    substantially the same labor force; (4) to
    maintain the same supervisory personnel; (5)
    to use the same equipment and machinery and to
    employ the same methods of production; (6) the
    production of the same products and the
    rendering of the same services; (7) continuity
    of identity; and (8) the operation of the
    business during the transfer period.
    
    Id.
     (quoting Cooperativa Azucarera, 98 P.R. at 317-18) (alteration
    in original).     López and Domena argue that because the record
    indisputably demonstrates that nearly all of these factors are
    satisfied in their situation, we must hold Walden liable as Akal's
    "replacement."
    We    generally   agree   with    López   and      Domena's
    characterization of the record, but that does not win the day for
    them.   Specifically, the fact that Walden may have "replaced" Akal
    within the meaning of this multifactor test does not overcome the
    threshold limitations of the successor employer doctrine that we
    have already noted.    Rather, those formal limitations prevent us
    from even applying the multifactor test.    To the extent that López
    and Domena suggest that their case demonstrates the need to revisit
    those formal limitations, that argument also fails.        "A litigant
    who chooses federal court over state court 'cannot expect this
    court to . . . blaze new and unprecedented jurisprudential trails'
    as to state law."     Doe v. Trs. of Bos. Coll., 
    942 F.3d 527
    , 535
    - 12 -
    (1st Cir. 2019) (quoting A. Johnson & Co. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur.
    Co., 
    933 F.2d 66
    , 73 n.10 (1st Cir. 1991)) (omission in original).
    Instead, we "must take state law as [we] find[] it: not as it might
    conceivably be, some day; nor even as it should be."     Kassel v.
    Gannett Co., 
    875 F.2d 935
    , 950 (1st Cir. 1989) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    López and Domena also gain no benefit from the former5
    executive order that they invoke.   Executive Order 13,495 mandated
    that new federal contractors offer a right of first refusal to all
    qualified employees of the previous contractor.    See Exec. Order
    No. 13,495, Nondisplacement of Qualified Workers Under Service
    Contracts, 
    74 Fed. Reg. 6103
     (Jan. 30, 2009).   Although the cited
    executive order does reflect a federal interest in "a carryover
    work force," see 
    id.,
     which arguably might be relevant to the
    question of whether López and Domena's discharge was "without just
    cause" under Commonwealth law, we never even reach that question
    given the futility of López and Domena's successor employer theory
    of liability.
    5 Executive Order 13,495 was in effect when Walden assumed
    the USMS contract in 2015.        See Exec. Order No. 13,495,
    Nondisplacement of Qualified Workers Under Service Contracts, 
    74 Fed. Reg. 6103
     (Jan. 30, 2009) (previously codified at 29 C.F.R.
    part 9). President Trump rescinded Executive Order 13495 in 2019.
    See Exec. Order No. 13,897, Improving Federal Contractor
    Operations by Revoking Executive Order 13495, 
    84 Fed. Reg. 59,709
    (Oct. 31, 2019).
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    Accordingly, we must affirm the district court's grant
    of summary judgment.   So ordered.
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