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Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. J.B. Hunt Transport, Inc.

2nd CircuitSeptember 29, 2003No. No. 01-6253(L), 02-602KXAP)Cited 5 times
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Case Details

Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Claim Types

Discrimination

Outcome

The appellate court reversed the district court's award of $175,157.65 in attorney's fees to the employer, finding the EEOC's discrimination claim was not frivolous or unreasonable despite the underlying summary judgment against the EEOC. The court affirmed the dismissal of the underlying ADA claim but vacated the fee award.

What This Ruling Means

**EEOC v. J.B. Hunt Transport: Court Rules on Legal Fee Award** The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) sued J.B. Hunt Transport, claiming the trucking company discriminated against someone with a disability under the Americans with Disabilities Act. The company won the original case when a lower court dismissed the EEOC's discrimination claim. After winning, J.B. Hunt asked the court to make the EEOC pay $175,157 in attorney's fees, arguing the discrimination lawsuit was frivolous and unreasonable. The lower court agreed and ordered the fee payment. However, an appeals court overturned this decision. The higher court ruled that even though the EEOC lost the discrimination case, their lawsuit wasn't frivolous or unreasonable enough to justify forcing them to pay the company's legal costs. The appeals court kept the original dismissal of the discrimination claim but threw out the fee award. **Why this matters for workers:** This ruling protects workers and the EEOC from having to pay expensive legal fees when they lose discrimination cases, as long as their claims aren't completely baseless. It encourages people to report workplace discrimination without fear of owing huge legal bills if they don't win, making it easier to challenge potential violations of workers' rights.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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