Kassner v. 2nd ( 2007 )


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  •      05-4237-cv
    Kassner v. 2 nd Avenue Delicatessen Inc.
    1                         UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    2                              FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    3                                 August Term, 2005
    4   (Argued: February 17, 2006                        Decided: July 24, 2007)
    5                              Docket No. 05-4237-cv
    6         ------------------------------------------------------
    7                       DIANE KASSNER and MARSHA REIFFE,
    8                              Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    9                                  JOSEPH FARRINO,
    10                                     Plaintiff,
    11                                      –- v. –-
    12   2nd AVENUE DELICATESSEN INC. and JACOB LEBEWOHL, in his official
    13        capacity as Owner and General Manager of the 2nd Avenue
    14                          Delicatessen Inc.,
    15                              Defendants-Appellees.
    16         ------------------------------------------------------
    17   Before: KEARSE and SACK, Circuit Judges, and STANCEU, Judge.*
    18         Plaintiffs-appellants, who sued alleging age discrimination
    19   and retaliation by defendants-appellees in violation of Federal,
    20   New York State, and New York City laws, appeal the judgment of
    21   the United States District Court for the Southern District of New
    22   York (George B. Daniels, Judge) granting defendants’ motion under
    * The Honorable Timothy C. Stanceu, United States Court of
    International Trade, sitting by designation.
    1   Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) to dismiss plaintiffs’
    2   complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be
    3   granted and denying as futile plaintiffs’ cross-motion to amend
    4   that complaint.
    5        AFFIRMED IN PART and VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART.
    6                                 Lee Nuwesra (Jerald Abrams, on the
    7                                 brief), Law Office of Lee Nuwesra,
    8                                 New York, New York, for Plaintiffs-
    9                                 Appellants.
    10                                 Kenneth Kirschner (Michael E.
    11                                 DeLarco, on the brief), Heller
    12                                 Ehrman LLP, New York, New York, for
    13                                 Defendants-Appellees.
    14   STANCEU, Judge:
    15        Plaintiffs-appellants Diane Kassner and Marsha Reiffe
    16   brought an action in the United States District Court for the
    17   Southern District of New York in September 2004, alleging age
    18   discrimination on the basis of adverse employment actions and
    19   retaliation in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment
    20   Act of 1967 (“ADEA”), as amended, 
    29 U.S.C. § 621
     et seq., the
    21   New York State Human Rights Law (“NYSHRL”), 
    N.Y. Exec. Law § 296
    22   et seq., and the New York City Human Rights Law (“NYCHRL”),
    23   N.Y.C. Admin. Code § 8-101 et seq.   They appeal from the district
    24   court’s judgment in favor of defendants-appellees 2nd Avenue
    25   Delicatessen Inc. and its owner and general manager, Jacob
    26   Lebewohl, entered on July 8, 2005.
    27        The district court (George B. Daniels, Judge) granted
    28   defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state
    2
    1   a claim upon which relief can be granted and denied as futile
    2   plaintiffs’ cross-motion to amend the complaint.   The district
    3   court ruled that all of Kassner’s claims were time-barred under
    4   applicable statutes of limitations, that most of Reiffe’s claims
    5   also were time-barred, and that Reiffe’s remaining claims either
    6   did not amount to an adverse employment action or were supported
    7   by insufficient factual allegations from which the court could
    8   infer age discrimination.   The district court concluded, further,
    9   that allowing plaintiffs to amend the complaint would be futile
    10   because plaintiffs’ proposed amended complaint alleged few new
    11   facts and because, in restating the same alleged acts by
    12   defendants without the references to specific dates that appeared
    13   in the complaint as filed, the proposed amended complaint could
    14   hide, but not cure, any timeliness deficiencies.
    15        We conclude that certain of plaintiffs’ claims were
    16   supported by factual allegations sufficient to withstand a motion
    17   to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be
    18   granted.   We further conclude that the district court erred in
    19   denying the motion to amend the complaint on the ground of
    20   futility and direct that the district court, on remand, exercise
    21   its discretion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16(b) to
    22   determine whether the proposed amendment or different amendments
    23   to the complaint should be allowed.   For these reasons, we vacate
    24   the judgment dismissing the action and remand the matter to the
    25   district court for further proceedings in accordance with this
    26   Opinion.
    3
    1                             I.    BACKGROUND
    2        When they commenced their action in district court in 2004,
    3   plaintiffs Kassner and Reiffe were 79 and 61 years of age,
    4   respectively, and were employed as waitresses in a restaurant
    5   operated by defendant 2nd Avenue Delicatessen Inc.      Kassner had
    6   worked for 2nd Avenue Delicatessen Inc. since 1986; Reiffe began
    7   her employment there in 1974.    On November 26, 2002 and
    8   December 20, 2002, prior to bringing this action, Reiffe and
    9   Kassner, respectively, filed claims of age discrimination with
    10   the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) against 2nd
    11   Avenue Delicatessen Inc. and Jacob Lebewohl.      See Br. for Defs.-
    12   Appellees 5.   The EEOC issued each plaintiff a right-to-sue form
    13   letter dated June 18, 2004.     Id. at 6.
    14        Plaintiffs filed their complaint in the United States
    15   District Court for the Southern District of New York on
    16   September 13, 2004, alleging that defendants violated the ADEA,
    17   the NYSHRL, and the NYCHRL by discriminating against plaintiffs
    18   on account of age and by retaliating against plaintiffs for
    19   complaining about age discrimination and for bringing charges
    20   alleging age discrimination.    The complaint contains various
    21   allegations to the effect that defendants discriminated against
    22   plaintiffs by assigning them to work shifts and work stations at
    23   which earnings were less than those to which younger waitresses
    24   were assigned.   Compl. ¶¶ 12-13, 21-23.     The complaint alleged
    25   that defendant Lebewohl and several of his subordinates
    4
    1   repeatedly made degrading comments about Kassner, “including, but
    2   not limited to, ‘drop dead,’ ‘retire early,’ ‘take off all of
    3   that make-up[,]’ and ‘take off your wig.’”    Id. ¶ 14.    The
    4   complaint further alleged that defendants retaliated against
    5   Reiffe by changing her work shift and work station.       Id.
    6   ¶¶ 20-23.   In addition, the complaint claimed that defendant
    7   Lebewohl pressured plaintiffs to retire and pointed to the front
    8   of the restaurant and said “there’s the door” when they
    9   complained about their disparate treatment.    Id. ¶¶ 44-45, 50-51,
    10   56-57 (emphasis omitted).   Plaintiffs sought injunctive relief,
    11   lost earnings, compensatory and punitive damages, and an award
    12   for attorneys’ fees.   Id. ¶ 2, PRAYER FOR RELIEF.
    13        On September 22, 2004, nine days after plaintiffs filed the
    14   complaint, the district court entered a Civil Case Management
    15   Plan and Scheduling Order, pursuant to Rules 16 and 26(f) of the
    16   Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.    The Case Management Plan and
    17   Scheduling Order limited the time for amendment of the pleadings,
    18   requiring any amendments to the pleadings to be made by
    19   February 1, 2005.
    20        Defendants did not file or serve an answer to the complaint
    21   but instead, on October 12, 2004, moved to dismiss under Federal
    22   Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim
    23   upon which relief can be granted.    During approximately the next
    24   four months, plaintiffs sought and were granted extensions of
    25   time in which to respond to the motion to dismiss, to engage in
    26   settlement discussions with defendants, and to obtain new
    5
    1   counsel.    On March 4, 2005, plaintiffs, through their new
    2   counsel, timely filed their opposition to the motion to dismiss
    3   and moved to amend their complaint.
    4        In a judgment entered on July 8, 2005, the district court
    5   granted defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint for failure
    6   to state a claim upon which relief can be granted and denied
    7   plaintiffs’ cross-motion to amend the complaint.    In its
    8   Memorandum Decision and Order, dated July 5, 2005, the district
    9   court concluded that plaintiffs’ ADEA claims were time-barred to
    10   the extent they were based on discrete acts that occurred before
    11   February 23, 2002 because the ADEA requires filing of an
    12   administrative complaint with the EEOC within 300 days after the
    13   alleged unlawful employment practice.    Mem. Dec. & Order at 3;
    14   see 
    29 U.S.C. § 626
    (d) (2000).    The district court also found
    15   plaintiffs’ NYSHRL and NYCHRL claims to be time-barred by the
    16   applicable three-year statutes of limitations to the extent they
    17   were based on discrete acts occurring before September 13, 2001.
    18   See Mem. Dec. & Order at 3-4.    The district court concluded that
    19   all of Kassner’s claims were time-barred because they were based
    20   on alleged discrete acts occurring in 1999.    
    Id. at 4
    .     Moreover,
    21   the district court ruled that the only allegations by Reiffe of
    22   discriminatory acts that were not time-barred “either do not
    23   amount to an adverse employment action or are insufficient
    24   factual allegations to infer that those actions were based upon
    25   her age.”    
    Id. at 4-5
    .
    6
    1        In denying plaintiffs’ cross-motion to amend the complaint,
    2   the district court noted that the proposed amended complaint
    3   “adds few new factual allegations” and “simply drops any
    4   reference to applicable dates in an attempt to vaguely and
    5   generally refer to events without any time reference.”       
    Id. at 6
    .
    6   The district court concluded that “[s]uch a proposed amendment
    7   may hide, but cannot cure, any time-barred deficiencies.      It
    8   therefore would be futile.”      
    Id.
    9        Plaintiffs-appellants subsequently brought this appeal and,
    10   in connection therewith, request legal fees and costs.
    11                              II.    DISCUSSION
    12         A. The District Court Erred in Granting Defendants’
    13     Rule 12(b)(6) Motion to Dismiss the Complaint in the Entirety
    14        We review de novo the district court’s grant of a motion to
    15   dismiss.   Dougherty v. Town of N. Hempstead Bd. of Zoning
    16   Appeals, 
    282 F.3d 83
    , 87 (2d Cir. 2002).       In considering a motion
    17   to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be
    18   granted, the court is to accept as true all facts alleged in the
    19   complaint.   
    Id.
       The court is to draw all reasonable inferences
    20   in favor of the plaintiff.       Fernandez v. Chertoff, 
    471 F.3d 45
    ,
    21   51 (2d Cir. 2006); see also Leibowitz v. Cornell Univ., 
    445 F.3d 22
       586, 591-92 (2d Cir. 2006).      The Supreme Court has held that,
    23   under the notice system of pleading established by the Federal
    24   Rules of Civil Procedure, “an employment discrimination plaintiff
    25   need not plead a prima facie case of discrimination.”
    26   Swierkiewicz v. Sorema N.A., 
    534 U.S. 506
    , 515 (2002).       Under
    7
    1   Rule 8(a)(2), the pleading requirement is satisfied by “a short
    2   and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is
    3   entitled to relief.”   Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2).   “Such a statement
    4   must simply ‘give the defendant fair notice of what the
    5   plaintiff’s claim is and the grounds upon which it rests.’”
    6   Swierkiewicz, 
    534 U.S. at 512
     (quoting Conley v. Gibson, 
    355 U.S. 7
       41, 47 (1957)); Leibowitz, 445 F.3d at 591.   The Supreme Court
    8   has rejected the argument that allowing lawsuits based on
    9   conclusory allegations of discrimination would encourage
    10   disgruntled employees to sue and thereby overburden the courts.
    11   “Whatever the practical merits of this argument, the Federal
    12   Rules do not contain a heightened pleading standard for
    13   employment discrimination suits.”    Swierkiewicz, 
    534 U.S. 14
       at 514-15.   Therefore, in considering such a motion to dismiss,
    15   "[t]he appropriate inquiry is not whether a plaintiff is likely
    16   to prevail, but whether he is entitled to offer evidence to
    17   support his claims."   Fernandez, 
    471 F.3d at 51
     (internal
    18   quotation marks and citation omitted).
    19        In reviewing the complaint and thereby dismissing
    20   plaintiffs’ age discrimination claims, the district court
    21   considered many discrete acts to be time-barred.   A plaintiff
    22   seeking to recover under the ADEA must file a discrimination
    23   charge with a state agency within 300 days of the occurrence of
    24   the allegedly unlawful employment practice.    See 29 U.S.C.
    25   § 626(d)(2).   The district court concluded that plaintiffs’ ADEA
    26   claims were time-barred to the extent they were based on discrete
    8
    1   acts that occurred before February 23, 2002, based on a filing
    2   date of December 20, 2002 for the administrative EEOC
    3   complaints.1   Mem. Dec. & Order at 3.   Because claims under the
    4   NYSHRL and the NYCHRL are time-barred unless filed within three
    5   years of the alleged discriminatory acts, the district court also
    6   ruled that such claims are time-barred to the extent they were
    7   based on discrete acts occurring before September 13, 2001.    Id.
    8   at 3-4; see 
    N.Y. Exec. Law § 296
    ; 
    N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 214
    (2)
    9   (McKinney 2003); N.Y.C. Admin. Code § 8-502(d).
    10        A prima facie case of age discrimination requires that
    11   plaintiffs demonstrate membership in a protected class,
    12   qualification for their position, an adverse employment action,
    13   and circumstances that support an inference of age
    14   discrimination.   Galabya v. New York City Bd. of Educ., 
    202 F.3d 15
       636, 639 (2d Cir. 2000).   “A plaintiff sustains an adverse
    16   employment action if he or she endures a ‘materially adverse
    17   change’ in the terms and conditions of employment.    To be
    18   ‘materially adverse’ a change in working conditions must be ‘more
    19   disruptive than a mere inconvenience or an alteration of job
    20   responsibilities.’”   
    Id. at 640
     (quoting Crady v. Liberty Nat'l
    21   Bank & Trust Co., 
    993 F.2d 132
    , 136 (7th Cir. 1993)) (citation
    1
    The complaint alleges that both plaintiffs filed their
    EEOC complaints “on or about December 20, 2002.” Compl. ¶ 3.
    According to the copies of the EEOC complaints in the record,
    Kassner’s EEOC charge was filed on that date, but Reiffe’s EEOC
    charge actually was filed 24 days earlier, on November 26, 2002.
    Accordingly, Reiffe’s ADEA claims are time-barred if based on
    discrete acts occurring before January 30, 2002.
    9
    1   omitted).   A change that is “materially adverse” could consist
    2   of, inter alia, “a demotion evidenced by a decrease in wage or
    3   salary, a less distinguished title, a material loss of benefits,
    4   significantly diminished material responsibilities, or other
    5   indices . . . unique to a particular situation.”    
    Id.
     (omission
    6   in original) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).     At
    7   this stage of litigation, plaintiffs need not plead a prima facie
    8   case and may withstand a motion to dismiss by meeting a lesser
    9   standard.   Plaintiffs need only comply with Rule 8(a)(2) by
    10   providing a short and plain statement of the claim that shows
    11   that plaintiffs are entitled to relief and that gives the
    12   defendants fair notice of plaintiffs’ claims of age
    13   discrimination and the grounds upon which those claims rest.      See
    14   Swierkiewicz, 
    534 U.S. at 512
    .
    15        We agree with the district court that certain acts alleged
    16   in the complaint do not plead causes of action that were timely
    17   under the applicable statutes of limitations.   Nevertheless, the
    18   complaint contains other allegations that, when construed
    19   together to draw all reasonable inferences in favor of
    20   plaintiffs, state valid causes of action under the ADEA, the
    21   NYSHRL, and the NYCHRL.   As to the discrete acts for which the
    22   district court considered claims to be timely, the district court
    23   observed that “[p]laintiffs primarily complain of a number of
    24   shift or work station changes that reduced their potential for
    25   tip income.”   Mem. Dec. & Order at 5.   With respect to such
    10
    1   “shift or work station changes,” the district court concluded
    2   that “none of the acts complained of by plaintiffs rise to the
    3   level of a material adverse employment action.”     
    Id.
         We decline
    4   to hold that a waiter or waitress repeatedly assigned to less
    5   desirable work stations and work shifts than younger wait-staff
    6   can never, under any proven set of facts, obtain a remedy for age
    7   discrimination in employment.
    8        We now turn to the allegations in the complaint relevant to
    9   each plaintiff’s claim of age discrimination based on changes in
    10   work stations and work shifts.     Kassner alleged in the complaint
    11   that “[i]n 1999, Defendant, Lebewohl, permanently assigned
    12   Ms. Kassner to work station six, located by the toilet and
    13   kitchen” and that “[c]ustomers do not sit at station six because
    14   of its location.”   Compl. ¶ 12.    This allegation of a permanent
    15   assignment to an undesirable work station is time-barred under
    16   the ADEA, the NYSHRL, and the NYCHRL.     “A discrete retaliatory or
    17   discriminatory act occurred on the day that it happened.”        Nat’l
    18   R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Morgan, 
    536 U.S. 101
    , 110 (2002)
    19   (internal quotation marks omitted).     As we have stated
    20   previously, a completed act such as a discontinuance of a
    21   particular job assignment is not of a continuing nature.
    22   Lightfoot v. Union Carbide Corp., 
    110 F.3d 898
    , 907 (2d Cir.
    23   1997).   The district court was correct in dismissing any claim
    24   arising from this factual allegation.     The complaint also alleges
    11
    1   that “[i]n 1999, Lebewohl also refused to assign Ms. Kassner any
    2   weekend shifts.     However, younger waitresses are rotated amongst
    3   the better stations and assigned to weekend shifts, which is when
    4   the most money is made.”     Compl. ¶ 13.   Because this allegation
    5   also is pleaded as having occurred in 1999, it too is time-barred
    6   under the ADEA, the NYSHRL, and the NYCHRL.      We conclude,
    7   therefore, that the district court correctly ruled that Kassner
    8   had made no timely allegations of employment-related age
    9   discrimination based on changes in work stations and work shifts.
    10        We conclude, as did the district court, that not all of the
    11   allegations of changes in work stations and work shifts affecting
    12   Reiffe are untimely.     The complaint alleges that in 1999
    13   defendant Lebewohl discriminated against Reiffe by making a
    14   change in Reiffe’s schedule that removed her from a Sunday shift.
    15   Id. ¶ 17.    In referring to a discrete act occurring in 1999, this
    16   allegation is time-barred under the ADEA, the NYSHRL, and the
    17   NYCHRL.     Another allegation in the complaint is of a
    18   discriminatory assignment, for four consecutive days in January
    19   2002, to the counter station, which the complaint alleges to be
    20   the least profitable station and to which only new workers
    21   allegedly are usually assigned.     Id. ¶ 21.   This alleged
    22   assignment is one for which relief is not time-barred under the
    23   NYSHRL and the NYCHRL.     On the face of the complaint, it is not
    24   possible to determine whether relief would be time-barred under
    25   the ADEA; the allegation would be timely under the ADEA if Reiffe
    12
    1   were able to show that the assignment was made on or after
    2   January 30, 2002.    The complaint also includes the allegation
    3   that Lebewohl, in September 2002, discriminated against Reiffe by
    4   changing Reiffe’s station and her hours on Saturdays such that
    5   she was removed from the early dinner shift.      Id. ¶ 22.   It
    6   further alleges that in September 2002 her hours on Tuesdays,
    7   which were 11:00 a.m. until 3:45 p.m., were changed to 12:00 p.m.
    8   until 3:00 p.m.     Id. ¶ 23.   These allegations of acts occurring
    9   in September 2002 do not refer to acts for which relief is barred
    10   under the various statutes of limitations.
    11        Viewed absent the time-barred allegations, Reiffe’s claims
    12   that defendants discriminated against her in her station and
    13   shift assignments are based on an allegation that she was
    14   assigned in January 2002 to the least desirable station, the
    15   counter, for four consecutive days and an allegation that her
    16   Tuesday and Saturday station and shift assignments were changed
    17   in September 2002.    The complaint fails to allege specifically
    18   that the September 2002 station and shift assignments were less
    19   favorable than those to which Reiffe previously was assigned.
    20   However, in the context of the complaint as a whole we are able
    21   to draw an inference in favor of Reiffe that the new station and
    22   shift assignments were less desirable than the previous ones and
    23   less desirable than those to which younger workers were assigned.
    24   We also may infer from the language of the complaint that the
    25   changes continued after September 2002.     Reiffe’s timely claims
    13
    1   relating to changes in shifts are limited to an allegation that
    2   in September 2002 her hours were reduced on Tuesdays and also on
    3   Saturdays, when she was removed from the early dinner shift.    The
    4   significance of the reduction in hours on Tuesdays is not
    5   apparent from the face of the complaint; whether this alleged
    6   action was adverse is a matter of speculation.   See Bell Atlantic
    7   Corp. v. Twombly, 
    127 S. Ct. 1955
    , 1965 (2007) (“Factual
    8   allegations must be enough to raise a right to relief above the
    9   speculative level.”).   We may infer the significance of the
    10   change in the Saturday hours based on the allegation in the
    11   complaint that the weekend shifts were the most lucrative shifts.
    12   Compl. ¶ 13.   We also may infer that the change in Reiffe’s
    13   Saturday hours continued after September 2002.
    14        The district court concluded that the timely claims on
    15   behalf of Reiffe “either do not amount to an adverse employment
    16   action or are insufficient factual allegations to infer that
    17   those actions were based upon her age.”   Mem. Dec. & Order at 5.
    18   The timely allegations made on behalf of Reiffe are limited in
    19   scope and therefore might be construed as insufficient to
    20   constitute a “materially adverse change” in the terms and
    21   conditions of employment, see Galabya, 202 F.3d at 640, were we
    22   not required to draw all reasonable inferences on behalf of the
    23   plaintiff.   The inferences in favor of Reiffe that we discussed
    24   previously cause us to conclude that Reiffe’s claims of age
    25   discrimination based on certain changes in work station and work
    26   shift assignments, although limited, are sufficient to withstand
    14
    1   a motion to dismiss under the standard articulated in
    2   Swierkiewicz, 
    534 U.S. at 512
    .   We conclude, therefore, that the
    3   district court should have allowed Reiffe to proceed on claims
    4   that certain alterations made to her work station and work
    5   schedule in January 2002 and September 2002, i.e., those for
    6   which relief is not time-barred, constituted employment-related
    7   age discrimination.
    8        We next consider the issue of discrimination based on a
    9   hostile work environment.   Although the complaint does not
    10   explicitly allege discrimination based on a hostile work
    11   environment, the complaint alleges “continued harassment” of
    12   Kassner and alleges facts from which we may infer pleading of
    13   hostile work environment claims as to her; the complaint states
    14   that “Lebewohl and several of his subordinates have repeatedly
    15   made degrading comments towards Ms. Kassner, including, but not
    16   limited to, ‘drop dead,’ ‘retire early,’ ‘take off all of that
    17   make-up[,]’ and ‘take off your wig.’”   Compl. ¶¶ 14-15.   An
    18   actionable discrimination claim based on hostile work environment
    19   under the ADEA is one for which “the workplace is ‘permeated with
    20   discriminatory intimidation, ridicule, and insult that is
    21   sufficiently pervasive to alter the conditions of the victim’s
    22   employment. . . .’”   Brennan v. Metro. Opera Ass’n, 
    192 F.3d 310
    ,
    23   318 (2d Cir. 1999) (quoting Harris v. Forklift Sys., Inc., 510
    15
    
    1 U.S. 17
    , 21 (1993)) (omission in original).      The determination of
    2   hostility depends on whether a reasonable person would find the
    3   work environment to be hostile and whether plaintiffs
    4   subjectively perceived it to be so.      
    Id.
       Minor incidents do not
    5   merit relief.    
    Id.
        Plaintiffs need not present a list of
    6   specific acts.    
    Id.
        To establish a hostile work environment,
    7   plaintiffs must “prove that the incidents were sufficiently
    8   continuous and concerted to be considered pervasive.”        
    Id. 9
       (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).       “A plaintiff
    10   must also demonstrate that she was subjected to the hostility
    11   because of her membership in a protected class.”       
    Id.
       At the
    12   pleading stage of the case, however, plaintiffs need not plead a
    13   prima facie case of discrimination based on hostile work
    14   environment, so long as they provide in the complaint a short and
    15   plain statement of the claim that shows that plaintiffs are
    16   entitled to relief and that gives the defendant fair notice of
    17   plaintiffs’ claim for hostile work environment and the grounds
    18   upon which that claim rests.      See Swierkiewicz, 
    534 U.S. at 512
    .
    19   As to Kassner, the allegation of a hostile work environment is
    20   sufficient for this purpose and thus entitles Kassner to proceed
    21   to discovery and put on evidence in support of her hostile work
    22   environment claims.     To prevail, Kassner will have to persuade
    23   the factfinder that, inter alia, the comments the complaint
    16
    1   attributes to Lebewohl and subordinates actually were age-related.
    2        As to Reiffe, however, we consider the factual allegations
    3   in the complaint to be insufficient to state a claim of hostile
    4   work environment.    The complaint alleges that defendants
    5   “pressur[ed] plaintiffs to retire from employment.”    See Compl.
    6   ¶¶ 45, 51, 57.   This allegation, even when aided by inferences in
    7   favor of Reiffe, is so vague that it fails to provide defendants
    8   with fair notice of the factual grounds supporting an implied
    9   claim that Reiffe was subjected to a hostile work environment.
    10   The complaint alleges no specific facts as to what was done to
    11   pressure Reiffe to retire.    The complaint does contain an
    12   allegation, which was timely under the NYSHRL and the NYCHRL but
    13   not under the ADEA, that the manager of 2nd Avenue Delicatessen
    14   Inc., in December 2001, suspended Reiffe without pay for an
    15   incident without conducting a proper investigation and, when
    16   Reiffe objected to the suspension, threatened to subject Reiffe
    17   to arrest if she appeared in the restaurant.    Id. ¶ 18.     The
    18   complaint, however, fails to allege any facts about the
    19   circumstances surrounding the suspension and the incident that
    20   gave rise to it.    The allegations made on behalf of Reiffe, if
    21   assumed to be true, would not be sufficient to justify a
    22   conclusion that Reiffe is entitled to a remedy based on a hostile
    23   work environment claim.
    17
    1        We turn next to the pleading of plaintiffs’ retaliation
    2   claims.    The ADEA prohibits an employer from discriminating
    3   against an individual employee because of the individual’s
    4   opposing any practice made unlawful under the statute.     29 U.S.C.
    5   § 623(d).2   Plaintiffs allege that they complained to defendants
    6   about their disparate treatment and that defendant Lebewohl did
    7   not act to remedy the situation but instead pointed to the front
    8   of the restaurant and stated “There’s the door!”    Compl. ¶¶ 44,
    9   50, 56.    The complaint alleges vaguely that defendants
    10   discriminated against plaintiffs because they opposed acts
    11   unlawful under the ADEA, made charges, and participated in
    12   proceedings in support of their ADEA rights.    Id. ¶¶ 42-43,
    13   48-49, 54-55.    Notably, the complaint fails to identify any
    14   specific acts by defendants against Kassner that are alleged to
    15   have been taken in retaliation for Kassner’s complaints or for
    16   her filing of discrimination charges with the EEOC in December
    17   2002.    We conclude, therefore, that the complaint fails to state
    18   a retaliation claim on behalf of Kassner under the ADEA, the
    19   NYSHRL, or the NYCHRL.
    20        We reach the opposite conclusion with respect to certain
    21   retaliation claims made on behalf of Reiffe.    The complaint
    2
    The NYSHRL and the NYCHRL contain similar provisions that
    describe retaliation as an unlawful discriminatory practice. See
    
    N.Y. Exec. Law § 296
    (7); N.Y.C. Admin. Code § 8-107(7).
    18
    1   alleges that retaliatory assignments to work stations and work
    2   shifts began after Reiffe requested that her union file a
    3   grievance on her behalf for the incident in December 2001 when
    4   Reiffe was suspended without pay.      Id. ¶¶ 18-20.   The complaint
    5   asserts retaliation claims based on the same alleged changes to
    6   Reiffe’s work station and work shifts on which it bases its
    7   claims of discriminatory assignments, i.e., the changes in
    8   Reiffe’s work station and work shifts in January 2002 and
    9   September 2002.   Id. ¶¶ 21-23.   As we discussed above, the timely
    10   claims of age discrimination based on alleged changes to Reiffe’s
    11   work station and work shift assignments are sufficient to
    12   withstand a motion to dismiss under the standard articulated in
    13   Swierkiewicz, 
    534 U.S. at 512
    .    Whether those alleged changes to
    14   work stations and work shifts constitute discrimination,
    15   retaliation, or both is to be determined as the litigation
    16   progresses.   We therefore conclude that the district court erred
    17   in dismissing all of Reiffe’s claims of retaliation.
    18        In summary, we conclude with respect to Kassner that the
    19   district court properly dismissed the claims of alleged
    20   discriminatory assignments to work stations and work shifts,
    21   erred in dismissing an implied claim of hostile work environment,
    22   and properly dismissed all claims of retaliation.      We conclude
    23   with respect to Reiffe that the district court properly dismissed
    24   certain untimely claims of alleged discriminatory assignments to
    25   work stations and work shifts but erred in dismissing other such
    19
    1   claims that were based on acts alleged to have occurred in
    2   January and September of 2002, properly dismissed any implied
    3   claim of hostile work environment, and erred in dismissing claims
    4   of retaliation based on acts that were alleged to have occurred
    5   in January and September of 2002 for which relief was not time-
    6   barred.
    7    B.   The District Court Erred In Denying the Motion to Amend the
    8                   Complaint on the Ground of Futility
    9         We turn next to the district court’s denial of plaintiffs’
    10   cross-motion to amend their complaint, which we review for abuse
    11   of discretion.   Dougherty, 
    282 F.3d at 87
    ; see Parker v. Columbia
    12   Pictures Indus., 
    204 F.3d 326
    , 339-40 (2d Cir. 2000).     In doing
    13   so, we review de novo any conclusions of law.     Dougherty, 282
    14   F.3d at 87.   Upon de novo review, we conclude that the district
    15   court erred in ruling that the proposed amendment to the
    16   complaint would have been futile.
    17         Rule 15(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides
    18   in the first sentence that “[a] party may amend the party’s
    19   pleading once as a matter of course at any time before a
    20   responsive pleading is served . . . .”     Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a).
    21   The second sentence of Rule 15(a) provides that “[o]therwise a
    22   party may amend the party’s pleading only by leave of court or by
    23   written consent of the adverse party; and leave shall be freely
    24   given when justice so requires.”     Id.
    25         At the time that plaintiffs moved to amend their complaint,
    26   defendants had not filed an answer.    Defendants’ motion to
    20
    1   dismiss, because it was a motion, not a pleading, was not a
    2   “responsive pleading” within the meaning of Rule 15(a).       See
    3   Barbara v. New York Stock Exch., Inc., 
    99 F.3d 49
    , 56 (2d Cir.
    4   1996).    The threshold question, therefore, is whether the
    5   district court was required to accept the proposed amended
    6   complaint because the plaintiffs were allowed by the first
    7   sentence of Rule 15(a) to amend the complaint as a matter of
    8   course.   We conclude that the district court, because of the
    9   effect of Rule 16(b), was not so required.
    10        Although Rule 15(a) governs the amendment of pleadings,
    11   Rule 16(b) also may limit the ability of a party to amend a
    12   pleading if the deadline specified in the scheduling order for
    13   amendment of the pleadings has passed.    See Fed. R. Civ.
    
    14 P. 16
    (b).    Under Rule 16(b), a party may obtain a modification of
    15   the scheduling order only “upon a showing of good cause.”       
    Id.
    16   The record in this case shows that plaintiffs filed their cross-
    17   motion to amend the complaint on March 4, 2005, more than one
    18   month after February 1, 2005, the date specified in the
    19   Rule 16(b) scheduling order as the final date for amendment of
    20   the pleadings.
    21        In Parker, we addressed the relationship between the
    22   standard imposed by the second sentence of Rule 15(a), i.e., the
    23   “freely given when justice so requires” standard, and the “good
    24   cause” standard of Rule 16(b).    
    204 F.3d at 339-40
    .   We held in
    25   Parker that a district court, despite the standard of the second
    26   sentence of Rule 15(a), does not abuse its discretion in denying
    21
    1   leave to amend the pleadings where the moving party has failed to
    2   establish good cause, as required by Rule 16(b), to amend the
    3   pleadings after the deadline set in the scheduling order.      
    Id.
    4   We stated with respect to the Rule 16(b) standard, “‘good cause’
    5   depends on the diligence of the moving party.”    
    Id.
     at 340
    6   (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(b)).
    7        However, we have not previously decided whether a party’s
    8   right to amend a pleading once “as a matter of course,” as
    9   provided in the first sentence of Rule 15(a), may be qualified by
    10   the trial court’s general discretion to limit, by means of a
    11   scheduling order entered under Rule 16(b), the time during which
    12   the pleadings may be amended.   Because the first sentence of
    13   Rule 15(a) allows a party to amend a pleading “once as a matter
    14   of course at any time before a responsive pleading is served,” it
    15   may be argued that the rule creates a right to amend pleadings
    16   that is not qualified by the district court’s discretion to
    17   impose time restrictions under Rule 16.    Fed. R. Civ.
    
    18 P. 15
    (a)(emphasis added).   As we discussed in Parker, Rule 16(b)
    19   expressly provides that a scheduling order is to limit the time
    20   for amendment of the pleadings and, in so doing, “is designed to
    21   offer a measure of certainty in pretrial proceedings”; we cited
    22   therein the advisory committee notes to the 1983 amendment to
    23   Rule 16, which discussed subsection (b).    Parker, 
    204 F.3d at
    24   339-40.   Although the Rule 16(b) scheduling order, in the
    25   district court’s discretion, may impose various time limits for
    22
    1   pre-trial proceedings (including time limits on “any other
    2   matters appropriate in the circumstances of the case”), amendment
    3   of the pleadings is one of four time limits that the trial court
    4   generally must include in a Rule 16(b) scheduling order.     Fed. R.
    5   Civ. P. 16(b).   The advisory committee notes provide that
    6   “[i]tem (1) assures that at some point both the parties and the
    7   pleadings will be fixed, by setting a time within which joinder
    8   of parties shall be completed and the pleadings amended.”    Fed.
    9   R. Civ. P. 16 Advisory Committee Notes, 1983 Amendment
    10   (discussing subsection (b)).   This objective would be frustrated
    11   by an interpretation of the first sentence of Rule 15(a) that
    12   precludes a district court from exercising any discretion to
    13   specify the time period during which a party may effect the first
    14   amendment of its complaint prior to the serving of a responsive
    15   pleading.   Rule 16(b), in allowing modifications of scheduling
    16   orders only for good cause, provides the district courts
    17   discretion to ensure that limits on time to amend pleadings do
    18   not result in prejudice or hardship to either side.   For these
    19   reasons, we hold that amendment of a pleading as a matter of
    20   course pursuant to Rule 15(a) is subject to the district court’s
    21   discretion to limit the time for amendment of the pleadings in a
    22   scheduling order issued under Rule 16(b).
    23        In denying the motion to amend the complaint, the district
    24   court relied on the second sentence of Rule 15(a), stating that
    25   “[l]eave to amend should be freely given when justice dictates,”
    26   and then, concluding that the proposed amended complaint did not
    23
    1   plead facts sufficient to overcome a motion to dismiss, denied
    2   that motion on the ground of futility.    Mem. Dec. & Order at 5-6;
    3   see Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a).    Because the complaint, for the
    4   reasons discussed previously, is, with respect to some claims,
    5   sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6),
    6   the district court’s futility analysis rested on an incorrect
    7   conclusion of law.
    8        Moreover, the proposed amended complaint would be sufficient
    9   as to some claims.    We note, for example, that the proposed
    10   amended complaint, if accepted, would cure the defective pleading
    11   of implied hostile work environment claims pertaining to Reiffe.
    12   The proposed amended complaint alleges, inter alia, that
    13   defendants began a pattern of harassment constituting a hostile
    14   work environment when defendant Lebewohl became the day-to-day
    15   manager of 2nd Avenue Delicatessen Inc.    Am. Compl. ¶¶ 24, 37.
    16   The proposed amended complaint further alleges that defendant
    17   Lebewohl aided and encouraged other employees of 2nd Avenue
    18   Delicatessen Inc. to harass and degrade Reiffe, as well as
    19   Kassner, because of their age in an attempt to force them to
    20   quit.   Id. ¶ 35.   The proposed amended complaint provides
    21   additional details on the alleged December 2001 suspension
    22   incident (which was not time-barred under the NYSHRL and the
    23   NYCHRL), see id. ¶ 52, and alleges that 2nd Avenue Delicatessen
    24   Inc.’s “employees/agent repeatedly and continually verbally and
    25   physically abused” Reiffe, giving as an example that Reiffe “has
    26   been spit on and kicked at by Defendant Deli’s employee/agents.”
    24
    1   Id. ¶ 38.    The proposed amended complaint states that the
    2   employee/agent who allegedly spit on and kicked Reiffe was a co-
    3   worker “acting under the direction of management in contributing
    4   to the hostile work environment against Ms. Reiffe.”    Id. ¶¶ 52,
    5   53.   It further alleges that this co-worker was not disciplined
    6   for the kicking and spitting incident, and that instead, it was
    7   Reiffe who was suspended and then told by the manager of 2nd
    8   Avenue Delicatessen Inc., in response to Reiffe’s complaint about
    9   the suspension, that “[i]f you don’t like it, you can quit.       Why
    10   don’t you quit already.”    Id. ¶ 53.
    11         On remand, the district court must exercise its discretion
    12   under Rule 16(b) to determine whether the scheduling order should
    13   be modified so as to allow an amended complaint.    According to
    14   the principles we discussed in Parker, 
    204 F.3d at 339-40
    , the
    15   primary consideration is whether the moving party can demonstrate
    16   diligence.    It is not, however, the only consideration.   The
    17   district court, in the exercise of its discretion under
    18   Rule 16(b), also may consider other relevant factors including,
    19   in particular, whether allowing the amendment of the pleading at
    20   this stage of the litigation will prejudice defendants.     In this
    21   regard, we note that counsel for plaintiffs, at the district
    22   court’s hearing on the motion to dismiss and the cross-motion to
    23   amend the complaint, offered to submit a different amended
    24   complaint in the event the court considered the submitted
    25   proposed amended complaint inadequate.    See Mot. Hr’g Tr. 42-43,
    26   June 29, 2005.    The district court did not explicitly address
    25
    1   counsel’s offer.   The district court, as an exercise of its broad
    2   discretion concerning the pleadings, may consider whether to
    3   allow the already-submitted proposed amended complaint or allow
    4   submission of another one.
    5                            III.   CONCLUSION
    6        For the reasons stated, we conclude that the district court
    7   properly dismissed Kassner’s claims of alleged discriminatory
    8   assignments, erred in dismissing her implied claims of hostile
    9   work environment, and properly dismissed her claims of
    10   retaliation.   With respect to Reiffe, we conclude that the
    11   district court properly dismissed the untimely claims of alleged
    12   discriminatory assignments but erred in dismissing other such
    13   claims that were timely, properly dismissed any implied claim of
    14   hostile work environment, and erred in dismissing those of her
    15   claims of retaliation for which relief was not time-barred.     We
    16   further conclude that the district court erred in not considering
    17   whether plaintiffs had demonstrated good cause to amend the
    18   complaint after the expiration of the deadline in the scheduling
    19   order.   Finally, we decline to award costs or attorneys’ fees to
    20   plaintiffs-appellants.   The litigation before the district court
    21   has not progressed beyond the pleadings stage, and plaintiffs-
    22   appellants have yet to prevail upon any of their claims.   An
    23   award on plaintiffs-appellants’ application therefore would be
    24   premature.
    25        The district court’s judgment granting defendants’ motion to
    26   dismiss the complaint and denying plaintiffs’ cross-motion to
    26
    1   amend the complaint is therefore AFFIRMED IN PART and VACATED IN
    2   PART, and this matter is REMANDED to the district court for
    3   further proceedings in accordance with this Opinion.
    27