Showing posts with label demotion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label demotion. Show all posts

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Divided Sixth Circuit Reverses Summary Judgment for a Central Ohio Bank in FMLA Interference and Retaliation Case

The Sixth Circuit addressed two FMLA cases this week.  In one case, a unanimous Court affirmed the employer’s summary judgment over the employee’s claim that the employer interfered with his FMLA leave when it fired him for failing to call off every day in accordance with the employer’s policy even though the employer admittedly knew he was medically unable to work and was scheduled for surgery two days later.   White v. Dana Light Axel Mfg, Inc., No. 12-5835 (6th Cir. 8-7-13).  In the other, a divided Court reversed the employer’s summary judgment where the Central Ohio employee alleged that she had been demoted in retaliation for exercising her FMLA rights because internal emails raised questions about the employer’s business justification for transferring her position and whether it was done to compel her to resign.  Crawford v. JP Morgan Chase& Co., No. 12-3698 (6th Cir. 8-6-13).

In Crawford, the plaintiff suffered from PTSD after being held hostage at gun-point by a co-worker while working a second job at Safe Auto in 2005.  She was promoted by the defendant employer shortly thereafter and reported to a supervisor in Michigan and one in Phoenix.  While she took FMLA leave, the decision was made to transfer her position to Phoenix and she was allegedly demoted a month after her return to work to a less important position (but at the same pay, hours and bonus potential). In a series of prior emails among management, questions were raised about whether a business justification existed for the change in her position.  Managers were told that they could not eliminate her position and give her severance because the team had actually expanded.  Upper management requested to review her personnel files, and suggested making her part-time or re-deploying her.   Upper management also suggested putting her in a new role and then treating her as having resigned (without severance pay) if she resisted.  She filed suit instead and alleged that she was re-instated to a non-equivalent position upon returning from FMLA leave and was retaliated against for exercising FMLA leave.

The Court’s majority concluded that whether her new job was an “equivalent position” to which she was statutorily entitled upon returning from FMLA leave was a question for the jury.  While the employer contended that it was an “equivalent position” and that the transfer did not take place until a month after she completed her FMLA leave, the plaintiff raised questions about whether her reporting to a former peer and a reduction in her level of responsibility and career advancement potential made it less desirable.  Even if both positions carried equal pay and benefits, if the Quality Analyst II position did not require a similar level of training and education, then it was not equivalent in terms of status and thus the positions would not be equivalent under the FMLA.”

The Court also found that the plaintiff raised a question for a jury about whether the restructuring of her position was done in retaliation for her exercising FMLA leave.  The Court noted that Supreme Court’s retaliation from Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway v. White applied to FMLA retaliation claims: “[A] plaintiff must show that a reasonable employee would have found the challenged action materially adverse, which in this context means it well might have dissuaded a reasonable worker from making or supporting a charge of discrimination.” 

Here, Crawford has presented evidence that, upon returning from FMLA leave, she was transferred to a lesser position from Project Manager I to Quality Analyst II. Crawford argues that her new position constituted a demotion because the position included more clerical duties, did not require the same level of expertise, and she was required to report to a former peer. There is evidence in the record that suggests that Chase wanted to eliminate Crawford’s position, but there was no business reason to justify doing so. Even if we were to assume, arguendo, that Crawford was transferred to a seemingly lateral position, the change in job responsibilities support an inference of an adverse employment action. See Fisher v. Wellington Exempted Village Schs. Bd. of Educ., 223 F. Supp. 2d 833, 843 (N.D. Ohio 2001) (explaining that a lateral transfer is actionable as an adverse employment action if the conditions of the transfer would have been objectively intolerable to a reasonable person and changes in job responsibilities should be considered in this analysis). An email exchange among high-level supervisors demonstrates that there was a change in Crawford’s responsibilities in the new role and that these changes might cause Crawford to decline the new position and resign. As such, the change in positions shortly after Crawford’s return from FMLA leave, under these circumstances, could deter a reasonable employee in Crawford’s position from exercising her FMLA rights. We find that there is a genuine issue as to whether Crawford suffered an adverse employment action when Chase transferred her to a lesser position after she returned from FMLA leave.
Moreover, the fact that the transfer/demotion took place only a month after her return to work also raised  a question about the temporal proximity. “Such temporal proximity is ‘unduly suggestive’ and satisfies the causation element of plaintiff’s prima facie case at the summary judgment stage.” 

Regardless of its prior discussion, the Court found that the bank identified a business justification: the desire to transfer plaintiff’s job without adding another employee.   However, it also found that the plaintiff was able to show that the bank’s explanation might be pretextual:  

Here, Crawford raises an issue of fact regarding whether Chase’s proffered explanation was pretextual by presenting emails from high-level supervisors in her former department. Crawford relies on emails from Nicks, stating that Chase could not justify eliminating Crawford’s position, but the position could be moved to the Phoenix office so long as the transfer did not require hiring a new person. (Page ID 359.) These emails also suggest that the transfer of Crawford’s position involved at least some ulterior motive to push Crawford out of the company by offering her a lesser position with the hope that she would resign. (Page ID 359-62.) Therefore, Crawford has put forth evidence to show that Chase’s legitimate non-retaliatory reason for eliminating her position was potentially pretextual.

The dissenting judge objected to the weight given to the plaintiff’s view that she had been demoted instead of laterally transferred.  He found her objections to the changes in her job were de minimis. Moreover, the dissent found that the transfer did not constitute unlawful interference if the Bank could show that it would have taken the action even in the absence of the plaintiff’s FMLA leave.  The dissent believed that the bank had carried its burden of justifying the transfer and showing it was unrelated to her FMLA leave.   Similarly, the dissent found that the Bank had likewise disproved any unlawful retaliation.  Her former peer had been promoted and was supervising several employees, not just her.  Moreover,
there was no evidence that this transfer was designed to silence Plaintiff or scare her away from future FMLA requests. The record shows that she was always given leave under the FMLA when she requested it. After her most recent leave she was given raises and eventually promoted, and she was later given permission to work from home. This also eliminates Plaintiff’s  ability to show a causal connection between her FMLA leave and any adverse consequences. There is no basis upon which this Court can infer that her transfer had anything to do with her FMLA leave, as she had taken leaves repeatedly before and not faced any adverse consequences. To the extent that she can show any adverse consequences, her evidence proves at best that Van Dam bore her some animus, but that animus seems to have been based on personal dislike, rather than retaliation cognizable under the FMLA.

NOTICE: This summary is designed merely to inform and alert you of recent legal developments. It does not constitute legal advice and does not apply to any particular situation because different facts could lead to different results. Information here can change or be amended without notice. Readers should not act upon this information without legal advice. If you have any questions about anything you have read, you should consult with or retain an employment attorney.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Appeals Court Guarantees Higher Salary of Classified Employee Who Was Demoted Without Cause from Unclassified Position to Former Classified Position

In late June, the Hamilton County Court of Appeals held that a civil servant carrying the full protections of a classified employee but employed in an unclassified position is entitled to retain the pay of that unclassified position after a demotion back to a civil service job when the demotion was not based upon cause and the employer failed to obtain a signed waiver from the employee (in accordance with its own rules) when temporarily promoting him to the unclassified position (which was later abolished). Gissiner v. City of Cincinnati, No. 2008-Ohio-3161 (6/27/08). The Court held that only O.R.C. § 124 protected a classified employee from a pay cut for no-cause demotion, although it did not provide him with bumping rights because the unclassified position was not covered by the statute.

By way of background, the plaintiff was "temporarily promoted" from classified position of Senior Human Resources Analyst to the unclassified position of acting municipal investigations manager for the City. However, although he received a raise with the promotion he “did not did not sign a waiver giving up his classified status when he changed positions.” When the managerial position was later abolished in a reorganization, he was returned to his former classified position and the lower pay rate.

In the first phase of litigation, the plaintiff appealed both the demotion and his pay cut to the civil service commission, which dismissed the claim for lack of jurisdiction. However, the court of appeals reversed “because Rule 1.4(2)(A) of the city's Personnel Policies and Procedures Manual required a written waiver of classified status, and because the City had not secured [the plaintiff’s prior] waiver in accordance with [that] rule.” Accordingly, “[t]he case was remanded for an administrative hearing so that the commission could determine whether [the plaintiff’s] demotion was contrary to his property right to maintain his pay during ‘good behavior and efficient service.’”

At the next civil service hearing in the second phase of the litigation, the plaintiff “testified that he was reduced in pay by $32,106.86, that he had served as Manager for over 15 months in good behavior, and that he had received the assurances of several city officials, including two city managers, that he would not be reduced in pay. His testimony was not refuted.” Nonetheless, the civil service commission again affirmed the plaintiff’s demotion and pay cut, but on different grounds. The Court then held that “c]lassified civil servants have tenure during ‘good behavior and efficient service,’ can be discharged or reduced only for cause as set forth in R.C. 124.34, and have displacement rights if their jobs are abolished. Because [the plaintiff] did not waive these rights, he carried them with him to his unclassified position.”

While the Court acknowledged that O.R.C. § 124 did not apply to make the unclassified position a permanent classified position or to give the plaintiff bumping rights, “[o]ne could only conclude from the evidence presented to the commission that [the plaintiff] was reduced in pay and that this reduction contravened his rights as an employee with classified status.” In addition, “the City is estopped from opposing an award of back pay because it created this anomaly by failing to secure [the plaintiff’s] written waiver of his classified status, as required by its own rule, and by promising that [the plaintiff] would not be reduced in pay. We will not penalize [the plaintiff] under these circumstances.”

Insomniacs can read the full decision at http://www.sconet.state.oh.us/rod/docs/pdf/1/2008/2008-ohio-3161.pdf

NOTICE: This summary is designed merely to inform and alert you of recent legal developments. It does not constitute legal advice and does not apply to any particular situation because different facts could lead to different results. Information here can change or be amended without notice. Readers should not act upon this information without legal advice. If you have any questions about anything you have read, you should consult with or retain an employment attorney.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Ohio Court of Appeals Expands Right to Sue for Discriminatory Constructive Discharge and Demotion.

Last month, a unanimous Franklin County Court of Appeals reversed summary judgment previously entered in favor of an employer in an age discrimination case. Coryell v. Bank One Trust Co., 2008-Ohio-2698 (6/5/08). The Court made several significant holdings. First, the Court held that a plaintiff could show under certain circumstances that s/he had been discharged even if the employee voluntarily chose a severance pay option instead of remaining employed for an indefinite period of time. Second, the Court concluded that a plaintiff could pursue a claim for discriminatory job conditions -- such as a lesser job title and/or decreased responsibilities -- which fell short of a constructive discharge, even without a commiserate decrease in pay. Finally, the Court found sufficient evidence which the jury could use both to disbelieve the Bank’s non-discriminatory explanation for its conduct and to base a finding of discriminatory intent.

The Background



Plaintiff had been the Senior Vice President for the group “which handled the administration and servicing of institutional accounts involving assets subject to trust or other custody requirements. During his tenure, [the plaintiff] was active in direct client relationships and assumed full responsibility for all relationships that were threatening litigation due to problems predating [his] hire. In 2000, despite his experience handling direct client relationships, his supervisor directed him to no longer “maintain direct, selective account responsibilities” and he ”transitioned his accounts to individuals within his organization.” Following a reorganization and change in group leadership, the plaintiff became responsible for managing 28 employees. When discussions began about moving Plaintiff’s team to another group shortly thereafter, Plaintiff supported the move, outlined his suggestions for his role in the new group, and suggested that his management role be eliminated and he transition to a player-coach. However, because Plaintiff had no clients of his own and had been performing only as a manager for a few years, the new group declined to offer him a position after the move. Instead, Plaintiff’s duties were distributed between three other managers (one of whom assumed his former job title, received an increase in compensation and received a 300% increase in his bonus the following year).



Plaintiff continued on the payroll of his former supervisor at the Bank and was rejected for two open positions for which he applied. He was then offered severance and the option of remaining on payroll for an unspecified period of time or risking a six-month reduction in severance payments under the Bank’s new severance plan if he did not act quickly. After suffering a heart attack, Plaintiff accepted the severance option with a one-year salary continuation period and continued to search for another job within and outside the Bank. After finding a position outside the Bank, he filed suit and claimed he had been discriminated against on account of his age.
The common pleas court found factual dispute existed as to whether Plaintiff was qualified for the management position with the new group (which existed after his position was allegedly eliminated) and whether he was replaced by someone substantially younger than himself. Nonetheless, the common pleas court found, as a matter of law, that Plaintiff “was neither directly nor constructively discharged because he chose between meaningful options when he accepted the severance package” and, therefore, Plaintiff was unable to establish that he suffered from an adverse employment action as required to carry his prima facie case.



Existence of Constructive Discharge



In prior Supreme Court cases, the court has held that the prima facie case cannot be satisfied when the plaintiff chose severance instead of other options which would have preserved the plaintiff’s employment. For instance, in Barker v. v. Scovill, Inc., 6 Ohio St.3d 146, 147 (1983). the plaintiff had been “offered both termination with severance pay and layoff options, but was also given the opportunity to transfer to another plant.” She also “confessed that her refusal to accept the transfer was not based on the inherent undesirability of the offered employ; it was predicated on her belief that she " * * * could duplicate * * * [her] salary some place else." As a result, because she “made a conscious, well-informed, uncoerced decision, [s]he should not now be allowed to cry foul” later.



“When a plaintiff chooses termination in lieu of other options, courts will not construe his decision as an actual discharge. Rather, the plaintiff must show that he was constructively discharged, i.e., that his or her choice of termination was involuntary or coerced. . . . . Courts generally apply an objective test to determine whether a plaintiff was constructively discharged, asking "whether the employer's actions made working conditions so intolerable that a reasonable person under the circumstances would have felt compelled to resign."



The Supreme Court has explained that “In applying this test, courts seek to determine whether the cumulative effect of the employer's actions would make a reasonable person believe that termination was imminent. They recognize that there is no sound reason to compel an employee to struggle with the inevitable simply to attain the "discharge" label. No single factor is determinative. Instead, a myriad of factors are considered, including reductions in sales territory, poor performance evaluations, criticism in front of coemployees, inquiries about retirement intentions, and expressions of a preference for employees outside the protected group. Nor does the inquiry change solely because an option to transfer is thrown into the mix, lateral though it may be. A transfer accompanied by measurable compensation at a comparable level does not necessarily preclude a finding of constructive discharge. * * * A sophisticated discriminating employer should not be permitted to circumvent the statute by transferring an older employee to a sham position as a prelude to discharge.”



The Court of Appeals concluded that Plaintiff produced sufficient evidence to create a question for the jury about whether his discharge was imminent. The Bank “stripped him of his title, position, responsibilities, functions, supervisory role, and involvement in day-to-day operations and management, leaving him with no real position. [The new group leader] informed [Plaintiff] that he would not retain him as Managing Director of the National Accounts Group and informed the National Accounts Group that Kozak would immediately assume management responsibilities. [The new group leader] also told [Plaintiff] that he would not provide him another position in the National Accounts Group. Additionally, [the former supervisor] told [Plalintiff] that [the new group leader] was not amenable to [Plaintiff] obtaining any internal position related to institutional investment management. [Plaintiff] applied for two internal positions prior to accepting the severance package, but he was rejected for both positions. [the former supervisor] "highly recommended" that [Plaintiff] accept a severance package because [he] "did not have a position" and because [the supervisor] believed that [Plaintiff] would not be able to secure another position within” the bank. Plailntiff “understood that [his former supervisor] saw his own future with Bank One as "uncertain" and that he did not know how long he would be able to maintain [him] on the payroll. . . . Moreover, the severance package specifically provided that [plaintiff] could continue to seek a new internal position and, thus, simply guaranteed [Plaintiff] a continued salary and benefits while searching for a new position within the organization.”



Even though the Bank did not transfer Plaintiff, it “stripped him of all attributes of his former position, essentially leaving him in a non-existent position.” While Plaintiff remained on the payroll of his former supervisor’s group, Plaintiff “had no title, responsibilities or duties.” In that Plaintiff’s understood the tenuous nature of his former supervisor’s “own continued employment and Natsis's recommendation that [Plaintiff] accept the severance package, [Plaintiff] could reasonably have believed that termination was imminent should he reject the severance package. The record contains ample evidence that [he] desired to continue working for the Trust Group and made attempts to find another position within the organization both before and after accepting the severance package, but, in light of comments” by the leaders of the new and former groups, Plaintiff “could have reasonably believed that he would not be successful in obtaining a new internal position. ‘[T]here is no sound reason to compel an employee to struggle with the inevitable simply to attain the `discharge' label.’ Ultimately, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Coryell, we find that genuine issues of material fact remain as to whether Coryell was constructively discharged.”



Age Discrimination Without Discharge from Employment



In addition, the Court acknowledged that an age discrimination claim is not limited to wrongful discharge claims. Even where the employee is unable to show that s/he was constructively discharged, employees may pursue claims for age discrimination whenever they have suffered an adverse employment action in connection with discharge, hire or other terms and conditions of employment. “Whether a specific action constitutes an adverse employment action is determined on a case-by-case basis. . . . Generally, an adverse employment action is defined as a material adverse change in the terms and conditions of employment. . . . . Employment actions that result only in inconvenience or an alteration of job responsibilities are not disruptive enough to constitute adverse employment actions.”



“[A] job transfer resulting in a less distinguished title or significantly diminished responsibilities can constitute an adverse employment action. * * * As well, an employer's decision to transfer an employee to a different department, remove her from her management position, place her under the supervision of the person who took her former management position, assign her less job responsibilities that do not comport with her qualifications and give her negative comments on surprise performance evaluations can be classified as adverse employment actions despite no loss of wages or benefits.” For instance, in Bhat v. Univ. of Cincinnati, Ohio Ct. of Cl. No. 2000-04723, 2003-Ohio-5623, “the Court of Claims determined that the plaintiff demonstrated an adverse employment action where the University of Cincinnati removed her titles of director of cardiac transplantation and director of the heart failure program, despite maintaining her as a full professor with no loss of pay or benefits. The court found that the loss of the "director" titles had a significant effect on the plaintiff's status; "[s]he lost not only the prestige associated with the director's title, but also the level of responsibility and the perception of her professional capabilities associated with those roles." Likewise in Tessmer v. Nationwide Life Ins. Co. (Sept. 30, 1999), Franklin App. No. 98AP-1278, actionable discrimination was found “where the employer abolished the plaintiff's job-share arrangement, stripped the plaintiff from her position and title, reassigned her job duties to younger male employees, and initiated a salary audit that resulted in her position being reclassified to a lower pay band.”




In this case, the Court concluded that Plaintiff could pursue an age discrimination claim even if he had not arguably been discharged. The decision to not “retain [Plaintiff] as Managing Director of the National Accounts Group, to reassign [his] management and supervisory responsibilities” to a significantly younger manager who formerly reported to him, and “to not provide [him with] another position within the National Accounts Group had a materially adverse effect on the terms and conditions of [his] employment. Although [Plaintiff] technically remained employed, with no loss of salary or benefits, after Abunassar removed him from his position as Managing Director, Abunassar's actions left [Plaintiff] with no title, no authority, no responsibilities, and limited prospects of continued employment. At a minimum, [the Bank] contends that [it] eliminated [Plaintiff’s] position. Such an action had an adverse effect on the terms of Coryell's employment.”



Evidence of Pretext



"The factfinder's disbelief of the reasons put forward by the defendant (particularly if disbelief is accompanied by a suspicion of mendacity) may, together with the elements of the prima facie case, suffice to show intentional discrimination. Thus, rejection of the defendant's proffered reasons will permit the trier of fact to infer the ultimate fact of intentional discrimination. . . . . A fact finder's disbelief of the employer's articulated reason does not compel judgment for the plaintiff. Before a plaintiff is entitled to judgment, the fact finder must not only disbelieve the employer, but must also believe the plaintiff's explanation of discrimination. Reeves at 147, citing Hicks at 519. However, "[i]n appropriate circumstances, the trier of fact can reasonably infer from the falsity of the [employer's] explanation that the employer is dissembling to cover up a discriminatory purpose." Reeves at 147. Thus, a plaintiff need not always introduce independent evidence of discrimination to show pretext where there is sufficient evidence to reject the employer's explanation.”



The Court found there was sufficient evidence for the jury to disbelieve the Bank’s explanation for Plaintiff’s treatment and to infer the existence of age discrimination. ”First, only months before Abunassar removed [Plaintiff] from his position, [he] was selected to create and lead the National Accounts Group, based on his relevant experience and knowledge. All evidence suggests that [he] was successfully performing his role of Managing Director, and Abunassar admitted that he had no issues with Coryell's performance.” In his own affidavit, Plaintiff stated that his former supervisor stated that he “should manage the [National Accounts Group under Abunassar], as I was the most qualified." Plaintiff’s former supervisor ”testified that [Plaintiff] had been successful at Bank One, demonstrated technical knowledge, and was liked and supported by his subordinates. Second, while Abunassar desired the National Accounts Group manager to maintain a book of business, there is no dispute that Coryell's experience qualified him to resume direct client relationships. Until shortly before embarking on the creation of the National Accounts Group, Coryell successfully maintained a book of business, which he gave up at the direction of his former supervisor who, in direct contrast to Abunassar's business model, prohibited managers from maintaining books of business. Moreover, Coryell was willing and qualified to resume direct client relationships and suggested to Abunassar that he resume direct relationships and serve as a "player-coach," the very term Abunassar uses to describe his vision of the Managing Director role. The record contains evidence that certain accounts had not yet been transitioned to National Accounts Group employees, and the National Accounts Group organizational chart shows open Institutional Client Advisor positions, suggesting the availability of accounts for which Coryell could have assumed direct responsibility. Abunassar also admitted that, if he had wanted to assign Coryell accounts, he could have done so through the open investment relationship manager position for which Coryell interviewed, but was rejected. Such evidence discredits Abunassar's refusal to assign Coryell a book of business based on his reluctance to transition clients where unnecessary. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Coryell, we find that a fact finder could reasonably disbelieve appellees' purported non-discriminatory reason for their actions relating to Coryell's position and employment.”




“Because the fact finder's disbelief of [the Bank’s] proffered non-discriminatory reason, coupled with evidence satisfying Coryell's prima facie case, would permit (although not compel) the fact finder to infer the ultimate fact of intentional discrimination, we find that [the Bank is] not entitled to judgment as a matter of law on Coryell's age discrimination claim. We do not suggest that Coryell will or should ultimately prevail on his age discrimination claim, but conclude only that the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to Coryell, creates genuine issues of material fact, which preclude summary judgment. Accordingly, we find that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of [the Bank] , and we sustain Coryell's first assignment of error.



Insomniacs can read the decision in full at 2698 http://www.sconet.state.oh.us/rod/docs/pdf/10/2008/2008-ohio-2698.pdf.



NOTICE: This summary is designed merely to inform and alert you of recent legal developments. It does not constitute legal advice and does not apply to any particular situation because different facts could lead to different results. Information here can change or be amended without notice. Readers should not act upon this information without legal advice. If you have any questions about anything you have read, you should consult with or retain an employment attorney.