Judge Acker Continues To Limit Wrongful Termination Claims

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Wrongful Termination
Wrongful Termination Claims

In two previous posts, I wrote that United States District Court Judge William Acker provided employers with a weapon against employees making multiple claims of wrongful termination: Judge Acker’s Weapon  , Judge Acker Softens Position.  In ADA, ADEA, and Title VII retaliation cases, employees must prove that the protected characteristic was the “but for” cause of termination.  In other words, the employee must prove that the characteristic was the only reason for termination.  Judge Acker’s earlier rulings prohibited employees from filing complaints that claimed they were terminated because they were disabled, or old, or made claims of discrimination.

On May 26, 2016, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals reversed Judge Acker’s reasoning in Savage v. Secure First Credit Union, No. 15-12704, 2016 WL 2997171 (11th Cir. May 26, 2016). The Court found that Rule 8(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure expressly permits plaintiffs to plead alternative and inconsistent claims.  So, employees are allowed to file a complaint claiming that they were terminated because they were disabled, or old, or made claims of discrimination.

Undeterred, Judge Acker issued a new opinion last Friday:  Jones v. Allstate Ins. Co., No. 2:14-cv-1640-WMA, 2016 WL 4259753 (N.D. Ala. Aug. 12, 2016).  Judge Acker found that Savage merely prevented him from applying his “but for” analysis at the beginning of a case at the motion to dismiss stage.  Nevertheless, he found that Savage did not control at the summary judgment stage — when depositions and discovery are complete.  As a result, he dismissed wrongful termination claims under the ADA, FMLA retaliation and Title VII retaliation.  Effectively, he found that each of those claims cancelled the others out.

Almost certainly, the employee in Jones will appeal, and it will be interesting to see how the Eleventh Circuit addresses Judge Acker’s analysis.  For now, however, Judge Acker’s analysis effectively forces employees to limit the number of discrimination claims that they pursue.

 

Title VII or a Bull Fight?

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Title VII or Bull Fight?
Sometimes Title VII litigation is like a bull fight.

In an entertaining opinion, Judge Virginia Emerson Hopkins used a bull-fighting analogy in the course of denying a motion to dismiss employment discrimination claims.  See Harris v. Koch Foods of Ashland, LLC, No. 1:15-CV-2181-VEH, 2016 WL 3997247 (N.D. Ala. Jul. 26, 2016).  Tracy Harris sued her employer for violations of Title VII and the Equal Pay Act.  Judge Hopkins entered her opinion after Koch moved to dismiss the third complaint filed by Harris.

Like a matador waving her red cape, Harris’s filing of a new complaint induced Defendants … to charge in with a partial motion to dismiss in the hope that they could gore a count or two.  But la matadora is too swift, or at least the bulls charged too soon.  The motion will be DENIED.

Judge Hopkins’s opinion proceeds to take swipes at both parties — criticizing a “bizarre argument” by the defendants, while calling certain assertions by the plaintiff “ludicrous” and “laconic.”  At the end of the day, however, Judge Hopkins found sufficient detail and legal merit in Ms. Harris’s third complaint to survive the motion to dismiss.

Electronic Signature Can Result In Arbitration

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application

United States District Court Judge Lynwood Smith recently found that an electronic signature on an arbitration agreement was sufficient to compel arbitration of a sexual harassment claim.  Humphrey v. Cheddar’s Casual Cafe, Inc., No. 5:16-CV-00704-CLS, 2016 WL 3483168 (N.D. Ala. Jun. 27, 2016).

There is a strong federal policy favoring arbitration.  Nevertheless, the party requesting arbitration must prove that a binding arbitration agreement exists.  In Humphrey, the plaintiff did not explicitly deny that she completed the on-line arbitration agreement.  Instead, she argued that her employer failed to meet its burden prove that she was the person who actually e-signed the agreement.

Nevertheless, Judge Smith disagreed.  He found that the information surrounding the e-signature was sufficient to establish that the plaintiff e-signed the agreement.  Among other things, she provided the following information contemporaneously with signing the agreement:  (1) her social security number; (2) her first name, middle initial, and last name; (3) her street address; (4) her telephone number; (5) her email address; (6) her date of birth; and (7) her gender.

In summary, Humphrey demonstrates that in this age of on-line commerce, e-signatures are the functional equivalent of the “real thing.”

 

An Employer’s Demand That More Work Be Performed is Not Discriminatory

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businessmen-42691_640

The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals recently held that “[a]n employer’s demand that more work be done — even if unjustified — is not discriminatory.”  Schrock v. Publix Super Markets, Inc., No. 15-14631, 2016 WL 3425124 at *2 (11th Cir. Jun. 22, 2016).  Employers might be tempted to overreact:  “Great! I can load up my employees with huge amounts of work and it will never be discriminatory.”  Nevertheless, I suggest that employers should proceed cautiously.

Context is everything.  The Eleventh Circuit’s issued its holding when discussing a Title VII retaliation claim.  To successfully state a claim for retaliation, an employee must be opposing conduct by the employer which violates Title VII.  And, the employee must have a good faith, reasonable belief that the employer’s conduct violates Title VII.

In Schrock, the employee complained to her supervisors that she was being required to manage a bakery without sufficient time to do so.  When she was later terminated from employment, she claimed that her employer was retaliating for her complaints about being overworked.  She apparently never claimed that she was overworked because of her race, gender or other protected characteristic.  Therefore, she could not successfully pursue a retaliation claim, because a mere complaint about overwork is not protected by Title VII.

The employee in Schrock might have possessed a better claim if she complained:  “You are overworking me because I am African-American.”  But, Title VII will not provide an employee with protection for merely saying:  “You are working me too much.”

 

Constructive Discharge Claims Just Got Easier for Employees

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Supreme Court

Yesterday, the United State Supreme Court released a decision which makes it easier for employees to win constructive discharge claims.  See Green v. Brennan, No. 14-613, 2016 WL 2945236 (May 23, 2016).  A constructive discharge occurs when an employer makes an employee’s working conditions so intolerable that any reasonable person would be compelled to resign their job.

The issue in Green concerned the time limitations period in constructive discharge claims.  Generally, employees are required to file a charge of discrimination with the EEOC within 180 days of the last discriminatory act.  Under that general rule, some courts required employees to file their EEOC charge within 180 days of the last “bad act” by the employer.  Other courts permitted the employee to file within 180 days of deciding to resign.  Typically, the resignation decision occurred later than the last “bad act” and employees in some courts found their claims barred by the limitations period.

In a 6-2 decision, the Supreme Court found that the limitations period begins to run on the date that the employee declares his resignation — not on the date of the last discriminatory act.  As a result of that decision, employers and employees now have clarity on the limitations period in constructive discharge cases.  But, employees are also given a longer limitations period, which removes one potential defense for employers.

EEOC Weighs In On Transgender Bathrooms

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bathrooms

The United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) has issued a Fact Sheet on Bathroom Access for Transgender Employees.  It can be found here: Fact Sheet On Bathroom Access for Transgender Employees

The EEOC’s Fact Sheet seems to be a response to laws recently passed by States and even local governments.  Among other things, those laws restrict the ability of transgender people to use restrooms consistent with their gender identity.  Thus, the EEOC plainly warns that “state law is not a defense” to a transgender discrimination claim under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Other than providing a warning to governmental entities, the Fact Sheet basically provides a summary of the EEOC’s previous rulings on transgender discrimination, which hold:

 

  • denying an employee equal access to a common restroom corresponding to the employee’s gender identity is sex discrimination;
  • an employer cannot condition this right on the employee undergoing or providing proof of surgery or any other medical procedure; and,
  • an employer cannot avoid the requirement to provide equal access to a common restroom by restricting a transgender employee to a single-user restroom instead (though the employer can make a single-user restroom available to all employees who might choose to use it).

In addition to the EEOC’s Fact Sheet, President Obama’s Executive Order 13672 prohibits transgender discrimination by federal contractors.  The Department of Labor’s Fact Sheet interpreting that order provides:

Under the Final Rule, contractors must ensure that their restroom access policies and procedures do not discriminate based on the sexual orientation or gender identity of an applicant or employee. In keeping with the federal government’s existing legal position on this issue, contractors must allow employees and applicants to use restrooms consistent with their gender identity.

That fact sheet can be found here:  DOL Fact Sheet on LGBT Discrimination

 

I previously discussed LGBT issues here:  EMERGING LGBT ISSUES IN THE WORKPLACE.  The EEOC is clearly looking to enforce Title VII to prohibit discrimination on the basis of gender identity or sexual orientation.  At this point, the best advice for employers is to ensure that transgender employees are provided equal access to restrooms consistent with their gender identity.

 

Mishandling Company Funds Is Grounds For Termination

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Cash

The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals recently recognized that repeated mishandling of company funds in a short time period is a legitimate basis for terminating an employee.  Chukes v. Sailormen, Inc., No. 15-12192, 2016 WL 1534071 (11th Cir. Apr. 15, 2016).

Chukes began work as an Assistant Manager for a Popeye’s restaurant franchise in September 2012.  By October 26, 2012, her restaurant’s safe was short on cash at least three occasions.  On that date, the franchise suspended Chukes and launched an investigation into the missing funds.  The supervisor conducting the investigation testified that he intended to convert the suspension to termination if the investigation determined that Chukes was responsible for the shortages.

The day after her suspension, October 27, 2012, Chukes claimed that another employee was terminated after rejecting sexual advances by a co-worker.  Thereafter, the supervisor conducting the investigation determined that Chukes was taking money from the safe, and Chukes’ employment was terminated.  Chukes sued for discrimination and retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.  Those claims were dismissed in the United States District Court and the Eleventh Circuit affirmed dismissal.

Chukes tried to claim that her termination was discriminatory because funds were missing following the shift of another manager.  The Eleventh Circuit rejected that argument and relied upon the requirement that “the quantity and quality of the comparator’s misconduct be nearly identify to prevent courts from second-guessing employer’s reasonable decisions and confusing apples and oranges.”  The comparator had worked as a manager for years and money was only found missing once during his tenure.  In contrast, money was found missing three times during Chukes’s two-month employment period.

Federal courts regularly reject attempts by employees to compare their misconduct to that of other employees who are not terminated, because the comparator employees are not “nearly identical.”  Indeed, the “nearly identical” standard also played a role in a recent decision dismissing claims against Hyundai in Alabama: Eleventh Circuit Affirms Dismissal of Retaliation Claim Against Hyundai  Thus, the Chukes and Hyundai cases demonstrate the importance of implementing uniform standards of punishment for similar conduct by similar employees.

 

 

“Manager Rule” Protects Tuskegee From Retaliation Claim

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Manager

On April 21, 2016, Senior United States District Judge W. Harold Albritton found that Tuskegee University’s former Director of Human Resources, Ruby McMullen, could not sue the University for retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.  See McMullen v. Tusekegee University, No. 3:15CV16-WHA, 2016 WL 1601040 (M.D. Ala. Apr. 21, 2016).  Judge Albritton’s decision hinged upon the fact that Ms. McMullen’s arguably protected conduct occurred in the course of her normal job performance as Director of Human Resources.

On December 2, 2013, Tuskegee employee Tracy Boleware filed a complaint alleging harassment by University Vice-President Dr. Mohammad Bhuiyan.  Later that day, McMullen attended a meeting with Bhuiyan and the University’s General Counsel where termination of Boleware’s employment was discussed.  McMullen warned that termination of Boleware was, or might appear to be, retaliation for her harassment complaint.  McMullen was told that the University’s president had decided prior to December 2 to terminate Boleware’s employment.

After the December 2 meeting, McMullen met with the University President who told her that he did not feel she was on his team and wanted to let her know where she stood.  She also attended a subsequent meeting with the President, Bhuiyan and the General Counsel where they complained that she did not warn them about retaliation.  McMullen protested that she warned them in the December 2 meeting about the appearance of retaliation.

McMullen’s employment was terminated on January 21, 2014.  McMullen then sued Tuskegee for retaliation.  She claimed that Tuskegee retaliated against her, because she opposed the retaliatory termination of Boleware.

Judge Albrtitton granted summary judgment and dismissed the retaliation claim.  In part, he relied upon the “manager rule,” which holds:  “a management employee that, in the course of her normal job performance, disagrees with or opposes the actions of an employer, does not engage in ‘protected activity.'”  McMullen, 2016 WL 1601040 at *4.  “Instead, the employer engages in protected activity if she crosses the line from being an employee performing her job, to an employee lodging a personal complaint.”  Id. at *5.  Because McMullen opposed termination of Boleware in the course of her normal job performance as Director of Human Resources, Judge Albritton found that she could not successfully sue Tuskegee for retaliation.

The “manager rule”provides an effective defense for employers who are sued by managerial employees for retaliation.  Those employees are frequently required to give their advice and input regarding termination decisions.  If those managerial employees are later terminated themselves, the “manager rule” makes it very difficult for them to claim retaliation based upon their involvement in other termination decisions.

 

General Complaints About “Harassment” Are Not Protected By Title VII

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Harassment in its Many Forms and Types
Harassment in its Many Forms and Types

On April 18, 2016, United States District Court Judge David Proctor confirmed that generalized complaints by employees about “harassment” are not protected by Title VII.  Instead, the “harassment” complained about must be harassment that is prohibited by Title VII.  See Ellison v. City of Birmingham, No. 2:14-CV-00154-RDP, 2016 WL 1554927 (N.D. Ala. Apr. 18, 2016).

In Ellison, the employee sued for retaliation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, alleging that she was terminated for complaining about being harassed.  But, when complaining about harassment, an employee can only succeed if she possesses “a good faith, objectively reasonable belief that such harassment was unlawful under Title VII.”

While the employee in Ellison unquestionably complained about the way she was treated at work, Judge Proctor found that she did not complain about treatment that violated Title VII.  Instead, she complained about being: deemed a “troublemaker,” called a “devil” for “keeping up mess,” and called “baby duck” for following around behind a friend of hers.  Judge Proctor found that those complaints were merely about “unspecified personal conflict” and “wholly unrelated to Title VII.”

Judge Proctor’s decision simply reinforces the well-established principal that Title VII is not a “workplace civility code.”  Thus, not all “harassment” violates Title VII, and merely complaining about “harassment” does not grant protection under Title VII.  Instead, only complaints about harassment based upon a protected characteristic are entitled to protection.

 

Best Served Cold: 12 Years Between Protected Conduct and Retaliation

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Anger

On April 6, 2016, Chief United States District Court Judge Keith Watkins sent a Title VII retaliation claim to a jury trial — even though more than 12 years expired between the protected conduct and the retaliatory action.  See Pace v. Alfa Mutual Ins. Co., No. 2:13-CV-697-WKW, 2016 WL 1370029 (M.D. Ala. Apr. 6, 2016).

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 provides protection to employees who participate in proceedings involving claims of discrimination made by other employees.  In Pace, Mr. Pace provided interviews and deposition testimony in September 2000 in connection with a sexual harassment claim made by a co-worker against Alfa Insurance Company and his direct supervisor, Alvin H. Dees, Jr.  After the interviews and deposition, Dees resigned from employment with Alfa in October 2000.  Mr. Pace continued to work with Alfa.

In the fall of 2012, the executive leadership at Alfa changed, and Dees was rehired as Mr. Pace’s supervisor effective February 1, 2013.  On January 31, 2013, Mr. Pace and Dees engaged in a telephone conversation in which Dees said:  “[B]oy, I bet you thought you’d never have to mess with me again now, didn’t you?” Thereafter, Dees was hostile towards Mr. Pace, and Mr. Pace received a demotion on April 30, 2013.  Mr. Pace sued claiming that his demotion was in retaliation for his protected interviews and deposition in 2000.

As part of a retaliation claim, a plaintiff like Mr. Pace must prove that his demotion was caused by his protected conduct (the depositions and interview).  The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals has generally held that causation is proven by a close period of time between the protected conduct and the adverse job action.  But, the Eleventh Circuit has held that a three to four month period of time is too long to prove causation.  See Thomas v. Cooper Lighting, Inc., 506 F.3d 1361, 1364 (11th Cir. 2007).

Naturally, Alfa asked Judge Watkins to dismiss the retaliation claim:  if three to four months is too long, then 12 years must be far too long.  Judge Watkins disagreed and relied heavily upon Dees’s telephone call with Mr. Pace:  “The evidence reflects that, on January 31, 2013, the day before officially returning to Alfa, Plaintiff and Dees engaged in a telephone conversation in which Dees said, ‘[B]oy, I bet you thought you’d never have to mess with me again now, didn’t you?’ … Thus, despite the fact that years had passed since the time of Plaintiff’s participation in the Wilson matter, the Plaintiff’s testimony indicates that Dees had not forgotten the circumstances surrounding why he left his employment with Alfa in 2000.”  Pace, 2016 WL 1370029 at *9.  That finding was sufficient to support causation.

The Pace case is probably an outlier in terms of retaliation claims.  Nevertheless, if revenge is a dish best served cold, don’t brag when you are about to retaliate for old protected conduct.