Oldershaw et al v. Davita Healthcare Partners, Inc. et al
Filing
79
OPINION AND ORDER Granting in Part and Denying in Part Motions for Summary Judgment. For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS DaVita's Motions for Summary Judgment against Ms. Navarro (# 57 ), Ms. Augustin (# 60 ), and Ms. Stant (# 61 ) . There being no just reason to delay entry of judgment, the Clerk of the Court shall immediately enter partial judgments in favor of DaVita and against these Plaintiffs pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). DaVita's Motions for Summary Judgment against Ms. Landin (# 58 ) and Ms. Oldershaw (# 59 ) are GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART as set forth herein. The parties shall begin preparation of two Proposed Pretrial Orders, consistent with the requirements of the Trial Preparation Order (# 24 ), with regard to the remaining claims and shall jointly contact chambers to set a Pretrial Conference. The Court GRANTS DaVita's Motion to Amend (# 38 ) its Answer to assert an after-acquired evidence defense against Ms. Oldershaw's claims, and the Court deems DaVita's Answer to be so amended. The Court DENIES, AS MOOT DaVita's Motion to Amend (# 50 ) its Answer as to Ms.Landin, by Chief Judge Marcia S. Krieger on 8/1/2018. (agarc, )
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
Chief Judge Marcia S. Krieger
Civil Action No. 17-cv-00131-MSK-MJW
KELSEY OLDERSHAW,
BAMBI AUGUSTIN,
DENISE LANDIN,
ELINA NAVARRO, and
JANE STANT,
Plaintiffs,
v.
DAVITA HEALTHCARE PARTNERS, INC., and
TOTAL RENAL CARE, INC.,
Defendants.
______________________________________________________________________________
OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART MOTIONS
FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
______________________________________________________________________________
THIS MATTER comes before the Court pursuant to the Defendants’ (collectively,
“DaVita”) Motions for Summary Judgment against each Plaintiff (# 57, 58, 59, 60, 61), the
Plaintiffs’ respective responses (# 68, 67, 70, 66, 69), and DaVita’s respective replies (# 76, 74,
77, 75, 73). Also pending are two motions (# 38, 50) by DaVita to amend its Answer, the
Plaintiffs’ responses (# 44, 54), and DaVita’s replies (# 45, 55).
FACTS
The Court briefly summarizes the pertinent facts here and elaborates as necessary in its
analysis. The Plaintiffs are five female former employees of DaVita. Although the Plaintiffs
have joined their claims in this action, there is relatively little factual overlap in their allegations,
as each Plaintiff had a different job title, different supervisor, was subject to different allegedly
1
discriminatory acts, and suffered different injuries. The different Plaintiffs assert varying claims
of age discrimination, sex discrimination, disability discrimination, and/or prohibited retaliation,
arising under both Colorado and federal law.
DaVita has moved for summary judgment on all claims by each Plaintiff. Separately,
DaVita has moved to amend its Answer to add After-Acquired Evidence as an affirmative
defense to bar to recovery by Ms. Oldershaw (# 38) and Ms. Landin (# 50). This defense is
based on DaVita’s discovery that both women had secretly recorded workplace conversations,
allegedly in violation of DaVita policies.
ANALYSIS
A. Summary Judgment Motions
1. Standard of review
Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure facilitates the entry of a judgment only if
no trial is necessary. See White v. York Intern. Corp., 45 F.3d 357, 360 (10th Cir. 1995).
Summary adjudication is authorized when there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and
a party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). Substantive law
determines which facts are material and what issues must be determined. It also specifies the
elements that must be proved for a given claim or defense, sets the standard of proof and
identifies the party with the burden of proof. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242,
248 (1986); Kaiser-Francis Oil Co. v. Producer=s Gas Co., 870 F.2d 563, 565 (10th Cir. 1989).
A factual dispute is Agenuine@ and summary judgment is precluded if the evidence presented in
support of and opposition to the motion is so contradictory that, if presented at trial, a judgment
could enter for either party. See Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248. When considering a summary
judgment motion, a court views all evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party,
2
thereby favoring the right to a trial. See Garrett v. Hewlett Packard Co., 305 F.3d 1210, 1213
(10th Cir. 2002).
If the movant has the burden of proof on a claim or defense, the movant must establish
every element of its claim or defense by sufficient, competent evidence. See Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(c)(1)(A). Once the moving party has met its burden, to avoid summary judgment the
responding party must present sufficient, competent, contradictory evidence to establish a
genuine factual dispute. See Bacchus Indus., Inc. v. Arvin Indus., Inc., 939 F.2d 887, 891 (10th
Cir. 1991); Perry v. Woodward, 199 F.3d 1126, 1131 (10th Cir. 1999). If there is a genuine
dispute as to a material fact, a trial is required. If there is no genuine dispute as to any material
fact, no trial is required. The court then applies the law to the undisputed facts and enters
judgment.
If the moving party does not have the burden of proof at trial, it must point to an absence
of sufficient evidence to establish the claim or defense that the non-movant is obligated to prove.
If the respondent comes forward with sufficient competent evidence to establish a prima facie
claim or defense, a trial is required. If the respondent fails to produce sufficient competent
evidence to establish its claim or defense, then the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law. See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-23 (1986).
2. General legal standards
The Plaintiffs’ disparate treatment claims arise under the Age Discrimination in
Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq.; Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.; the Americans With Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et
seq., and the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act (“CADA”), C.R.S. § 24-34-401 et seq. Claims
under all of these statutes are analyzed similarly, applying the familiar McDonnell-Douglas
3
burden-shifting framework (albeit with slight variations as noted herein). See Daniels v. United
Parcel Serv., Inc., 701 F.3d 620, 636 (10th Cir. 2012) (ADEA); Fassbender v. Correct Care
Solutions, LLC, 890 F.3d 875, 884 (10th Cir. 2018) (Title VII); Kilcrease v. Domenico
Transportation Co., 828 F.3d 1214, 1220 (10th Cir. 2016) (ADA); Williams v. Department of
Public Safety, 369 P.3d 760, 771 (Colo.App. 2015) (CADA). Under this paradigm, each
Plaintiff bears the initial burden of establishing a prima facie case by showing: (i) that she
belongs to the requisite protected class; (ii) that she had the minimum objective qualifications
required for the job she held (or the employment benefit she sought); (iii) that she suffered an
adverse employment action; and (iv) that the adverse action occurred in circumstances giving
rise to an inference of discrimination. If the Plaintiff meets that initial burden, DaVita then bears
the burden of articulating a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for the adverse action, and the
Plaintiff bears the ultimate burden of demonstrating that DaVita’s proffered reason is a pretext
for prohibited discrimination.1 Id.
Certain Plaintiffs also assert that they subjected to impermissible retaliation for having
invoked rights under the ADEA, ADA, Title VII, or CADA. Like disparate treatment claims,
retaliation claims under each of these statutes are analyzed according to the same standards.
Hiatt v. Colorado Seminary, 858 F.3d 1307, 1315-16 (10th Cir. 2017) (Title VII); Nealey v.
Water District No. 1, 324 Fed.Appx. 744, 748 (ADA and ADEA); Agassounon v. Jeppesen
Sanderson, Inc., 688 Fed.Appx. 507, 509 (10th Cir. 2017) (CADA). The Plaintiffs must first
1
Under Title VII, the ADA, and CADA, the Plaintiffs must ultimately demonstrate that
their membership in the protected class was a motivating factor in DaVita’s decision to take the
adverse action against them. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e–2(m) (Title VII); Hamilton v. Oklahoma City
Univ., 911 F.Supp.2d 1199, 1207 (W.D. Ok. 2012) (ADA); Colo. Civ. Rights Com’n v. Big O
Tires, Inc., 940 P.2d 397, 401 (Colo. 1997) (CADA). Under the ADEA, the Plaintiffs must show
that, but for their age, they would not have suffered the adverse action. Gross v. FBL Financial
Servs., Inc., 557 U.S. 167, 177 (2009).
4
establish a prima facie case by showing that: (i) they engaged in an activity protected by the
relevant statute; (ii) they suffered an adverse employment action; and (iii) there is a causal
connection between the adverse action and the protected conduct. If they carry that burden,
DaVita must articulate a legitimate, non-retaliatory reason for the adverse action, and the
Plaintiffs must ultimately show that the proffered reason is a pretext for retaliation. Id.
With these standards in mind, the Court turns to each Plaintiff’s individual claims.2
3. Ms. Augustin
Ms. Augustin was hired by DaVita as a Recruitment Manager in 2012, when she was
approximately 56 years old. Beginning in 2015, Amy Denvir, Ms. Augustin’s supervisor, began
criticizing Ms. Augustin’s performance, commenting that Ms. Augustin was not a “driver” and
was not sufficiently “aggressive.”3
In late 2015, Ms. Denvir proposed elimination of Ms. Augustin’s position and creation of
another position titled “Senior Manager.” In discussions about the Senior Manager position, Ms.
Augustin concluded that the position was effectively identical to the job she was already
performing, an issue that she raised with Ms. Denvir. Ms. Denvir insisted that the tasks to be
2
Unless otherwise noted, the Court derives the factual discussions herein from the
Plaintiffs’ version of events.
3
Ms. Augustin’s brief seems to suggest that these statements should be understood to be
code for Ms. Denvir’s desire for a younger employee. But Ms. Augustin’s deposition testimony
does not clearly make such a link. Asked what she understood Ms. Denvir’s comments about
wanting a more “aggressive” employee to mean, Ms. Augustin testified that she understood Ms.
Denvir to mean “more assertive with the staff” and that such a demand “didn’t concern me.”
Similarly, when asked why Ms. Denvir “did not want you in the position because you weren’t
driven,” Ms. Augustin explained that “I wasn’t hard enough on the staff.” When asked why she
believed that instructions to be tougher on the staff constituted criticism because of her age, Ms.
Augustin testified “Because being more aggressive or more of a driver personality would be able
to get the results out of the team. I don’t feel she thought I had the capabilities of doing that.”
The only comment from Ms. Denvir that Ms. Augustin describes that clearly relates to
Ms. Augustin’s age are periodic comments by Ms. Denvir that Ms. Augustin “didn’t look as old
as [she] was.”
5
performed in the Senior Manager position differed from those performed by Ms. Augustin. In
particular, the Senior Manager would be conducting phone recruiting. Ms. Denvir observed that
other duties that Ms. Augustin was performing as Recruitment Manager, such as marketing,
advertising, budgeting, and planning, would not be accounted for in the Senior Manager position,
and that she would likely to continue performing those functions. Ms. Denvir suggested that Ms.
Augustin write up a proposal for a position that encompassed these tasks and that Ms. Denvir
would present it for consideration to her supervisors.
A few days later, a formal job description for the Senior Manager position was posted.
Ms. Augustin thought that “it was basically my current job description. . . . [I]t had been
reworded slightly, but it was basically what I was doing, and there was no mention of phone
work anywhere in the job description.” Ms. Augustin e-mailed Ms. Denvir about the job
description, observing that “it looks like everything I discussed is going to be the responsibility
of this new position.” Ms. Denvir responded that “All of the aspects that you’re doing are in the
job descriptions, that’s part of the whole department so [ ] it’s in the job description as either
doing or insuring it gets done. Does that help?” Ms. Augustin considered applying for the
Senior Manager position, but felt that Ms. Denvir had lied about her intentions for the position
and that “tempered [Ms. Augustin’s] interest in the position.” Ms. Augustin also had a
discussion with Colleen Herbranson, her former supervisor, and expressed concerns that Ms.
Denvir “did not want me in the [Senior Manager] position.” Ms. Augustin testified that Ms.
Herbranson “basically agreed with me.”4 Thus, Ms. Augustin chose not to apply for the Senior
4
Ms. Augustin has not tendered an affidavit from Ms. Herbranson or any other evidence
that would eliminate the hearsay character of Ms. Augustin proffering an out-of-court statement
by Ms. Herbranson for its truth. The Court will assume that Ms. Herbranson’s alleged statement
might be admissible to show Ms. Augustin’s state of mind – that is, Ms. Augustin acted a certain
6
Manager position. Instead, she continued working on a proposal for another position containing
the tasks she wanted to perform, and eventually presented it to Ms. Denvir.
Ms. Denvir ultimately selected Alyssa Roth, who was under the age of 40 and lessqualified than was Ms. Augustin for the Senior Manager position. Ms. Augustin presented her
proposal for another position to Ms. Denvir, and Ms. Denvir presented the proposal to her
supervisor, but the supervisor vetoed the request to create another new position. Ms. Augustin
was laid off in May 2016.
Based on these facts, Ms. Augustin asserts two claims: (i) age discrimination, in violation
of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq., and (ii) age
discrimination in violation of the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act (“CADA”), C.R.S. § 24-34401 et seq.
DaVita’s summary judgment motion challenges Ms. Augustin’s ability to establish the
fourth element of the prima facie case – circumstances giving rise to an inference of
discrimination – and contends that Ms. Augustin cannot show that DaVita’s reason for not hiring
her as Senior Manager – that she did not apply for the position – is pretextual.
The Court quickly dispenses with the prima facie case: Ms. Augustin is protected by both
the ADEA and CADA, insofar as she is over 40 years old. There is no dispute that she was
qualified for her position as Recruitment Manager, or that she had the objective qualifications for
the Senior Manager position. And there is no doubt that her termination (be it described as a
layoff or replacement or otherwise) constitutes an adverse employment action. Finally, Ms.
Augustin has shown that her termination occurred in circumstances giving rise to an inference of
way because she thought Ms. Herbranson made the statement – but the hearsay rule prevents the
Court from taking as true the fact that Ms. Herbranson indeed said such a thing.
7
age discrimination, insofar as her ostensible replacement, Ms. Roth, was substantially younger
than she was. O’Connor v. Consolidated Coin Caterers Corp., 517 U.S. 308, 313 (1996).
DaVita has proffered a non-discriminatory explanation for why Ms. Augustin was not
selected for the Senior Manager position - that she did not apply for it.5 The Court finds that Ms.
Augustin has not come forward with evidence to suggest that this explanation is a pretext for age
discrimination. Indeed, DaVita’s explanation is indisputably true: Ms. Augustin admits that she
did not apply for the Senior Manager position.
Ms. Augustin seeks to evade the significance of her decision not to formally pursue the
Senior Manager position by arguing that “Ms. Denvir went out of her way to ensure that Ms.
Augustin would not apply,” seemingly suggesting that it would have been futile for her to do so.
She lists five facts that she contends support that conclusion. First, she notes that Ms. Denvir
made comments about wanting someone “aggressive” for the position. Ms. Augustin’s own
testimony was that she understood this comment to reflect that Ms. Denvir wanted someone
“more assertive with the staff,” and Ms. Augustin stated that such a comment “didn’t concern
her.”6 Second, Ms. Augustin argues that Ms. Denvir lied about the Senior Manager’s job
5
The Court does not understand Ms. Augustin to contend that DaVita’s initial decision to
abolish the Recruitment Manager position and reconstitute it as Senior Manager was itself
discriminatory. Although it may be unorthodox for a business to engage in such shuffling (and
require incumbent employees to reapply for their existing jobs), DaVita’s motion offers a lengthy
explanation of a reorganization plan that triggered the job re-characterization, and Ms. Augustin
has not disputed any of the facts recited by DaVita about the reasons for that reorganization. In
any event, Ms. Augustin has not identified the person who decided to abolish and re-characterize
the job, much less come forward with evidence to suggest that such a decision was the product of
age bias by that decisionmaker.
6
In any event, even if Ms. Denvir did not consider Ms. Augustin to be sufficiently
aggressive with the staff, Ms. Augustin has offered no evidence to suggest that a sufficient level
of aggressiveness was something that only younger applicants might have. Without additional
evidence demonstrating that Ms. Denvir was using “aggressiveness” as a proxy or code for
“youth” – and Ms. Augustin offers only her own speculation on that point – there is no reason to
8
responsibilities in her first meeting with Ms. Augustin. Although it appears that Ms. Denvir’s
initial description of the Senior Manager job as being more focused on phone recruiting turned
out to be an incorrect statement of the job’s actual duties, Ms. Augustin offers only her own
hypothesis that Ms. Denvir misstated the job’s responsibilities intentionally and purposefully, as
compared to there being a simple miscommunication or misunderstanding on one or both
women’s parts. Even assuming that Ms. Denvir initially misrepresented the Senior Manager job,
it is clear that Ms. Augustin was later able to review the formal job description and confirm with
Ms. Denvir that the formal job description more or less encompassed all of her current duties as
Recruitment Manager. Thus, Ms. Augustin was fully aware of what the Senior Manager position
entailed when she chose not to apply for it. To the extent that Ms. Augustin decided not to apply
for the job because she no longer trusted Ms. Denvir, that too appears to have been a choice
made by Ms. Augustin, not a decision forced upon her because of her age.
Third, Ms. Augustin argues that Ms. Denvir “refus[ed]to follow up with Ms. Augustin’s
questions” and “encourag[ed] Ms. Augustin to waste her time on an identical position proposal.”
Once again, this seems to overstate the record. The only apparent instance of Ms. Augustin
posing questions to Ms. Denvir about the position was the e-mail exchange between the women
following the posting of the official Senior Manager job description. Ms. Augustin argues that
Ms. Denvir’s response to the e-mail was somehow “ambiguous,” but the Court sees no ambiguity
in Ms. Denvir confirming that “all the aspects of what you’re doing” as Recruitment Manger “are
in the job” of Senior Manager. As to Ms. Denvir encouraging Ms. Augustin to “waste her time”
on a proposal for a separate position consisting of the tasks she wanted to perform, the Court is
perplexed. By the time she submitted the proposal, Ms. Augustin had seen the Senior Manager
conclude that Ms. Denvir’s comments are indicative of age discrimination, rather than simple
dissatisfaction with Ms. Augustin’s style.
9
job description, concluded that it encompassed all of her current duties, and had Ms. Denvir’s
confirmation of that suspicion. One can only assume, then, that Ms. Augustin nevertheless
believed that the job she was proposing – presumably for herself to fill – was something different
from the Senior Manager job. The Court cannot say that Ms. Denvir allowing Ms. Augustin to
propose a different position for herself was somehow evidence of age discrimination by Ms.
Denvir. Finally, Ms. Augustin takes issue with Ms. Denvir “making no meaningful effort to help
her find a new job at DaVita and hiring a younger, unqualified employee into the role of Senior
Manager.” But these events occurred after Ms. Augustin chose not to apply for the Senior
Manager job, and thus can hardly be evidence of Ms. Denvir somehow discouraging Ms.
Augustin from applying.
The Court therefore finds that Ms. Augustin has failed to come forward with evidence
that would demonstrate that DaVita’s reason for not hiring her as Senior Manager – that she
failed to apply for the position – is somehow false and a pretext for age discrimination. Ms.
Augustin also makes an abbreviated argument that DaVita should have inferred her interest in
the position, given that she was already performing the position’s duties. It was clear that Ms.
Augustin was aware of the Senior Manager opening and her ability to apply for it, and it was also
clear that Ms. Augustin chose to forego such an application, apparently in furtherance of her
hopes that DaVita would instead create the new position she was proposing. In such
circumstances, she cannot show that DaVita’s refusal to consider her for a Senior Manager
position she chose not to apply for was a pretext for age discrimination.
Accordingly, DaVita is entitled to summary judgment on Ms. Augustin’s claims.
Because Ms. Augustin’s claims are factually distinct from those of the remaining Plaintiffs, the
Court sees no just reason for delaying the entry of judgment in DaVita’s favor on her claims
10
pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b), and such judgment shall therefore issue contemporaneously
with this Order.
4. Ms. Landin
Ms. Landin was hired by DaVita as an Executive Assistant in 2014, when she was
approximately 49 years old. Her immediate supervisor was Marty McGuirk. Mr. McGuirk
reported to Dan Viaches, and Mr. Viaches had ultimate supervisory responsibility for the entire
team of Executive Assistants.
Ms. Landin candidly acknowledges that “issues” arose among the Executive Assistants in
late 2015. Those issues primarily involved Catherine Lischer and Leah Schust, two fellow
Assistants that Ms. Landin characterizes as less experienced (and whom Ms. Landin initially
trained). Ms. Landin states that Ms. Lischer and Ms. Schust would “overwhelm[ ] her with
questions concerning Mr. McGuirk’s schedule,” even though the information they were seeking
was available electronically. Ms. Landin brought these concerns to Mr. McGuirk, who was
supportive of her and encouraged her to continue doing what she was doing. Ms. Lischer and
Ms. Schust, however, complained about Ms. Landin directly to Mr. Viaches, who “blamed the
Executive Assistants not getting along on Ms. Landin.” This led to a difference of opinion
between Mr. McGuirk and Mr. Viaches about the quality of Ms. Landin’s work and whether she
deserved a pay raise. Because Mr. Viaches had final authority on such questions, Ms. Landin
was not considered for a raise at that time.
In March 2016, DaVita’s legal team contacted Ms. Landin about allegations that another
employee had made in a separate wage and hour lawsuit against DaVita. Ms. Landin told the
legal team that she believed that the employee had a legitimate claim. Ms. Landin contends that,
thereafter, Mr. Viaches “became more aggressive towards her and his criticisms of her ramped
11
up.” (Notably, however, in her deposition, Ms. Landin acknowledged that she had no personal
knowledge as to whether Mr. Viaches even knew about her phone call with DaVita’s legal team.)
Ms. Landin’s summary judgment response gives a single example, referring to an instance in
which Mr. Viaches sent her an e-mail directing her to work with Ms. Lischer to reschedule a
meeting when Ms. Landin had already done so.7
At the time of her performance review in March 2016, Ms. Landin complained to Mr.
McGuirk that “I felt that Dan Viaches was treating me unfairly and I didn’t understand why.”
(Ms. Landin’s brief characterizes this statement as Ms. Landin telling Mr. McGuirk that “she
believed she was being discriminated against by Mr. Viaches,” but Ms. Landin’s deposition
testimony on the subject is limited to her expressing her confusion as to why Mr. Viaches would
ask her to train the other Assistants, and then, “all of a sudden, I‘m the bad person and was being
blamed for everything his [Assistants] weren’t doing correctly.”) When Ms. Landin received her
performance review, she was told that Mr. Viaches was not approving her for a raise, even
though he had approved raises for the other Assistants. Ms. Landin states that Mr. McGuirk told
her that Mr. Viaches was withholding any raise for her until the “issues” with the other
Assistants were resolved. Shortly thereafter, Ms. Landin was given a document that showed the
salaries being paid to each of the Executive Assistants. She learned that she was being paid less
than Ms. Lischer and Ms. Schust, among others, despite having more experience than they did.
In June 2016, Ms. Landin had a phone conversation with Mr. Viaches about her
performance. At the conclusion of that call, Ms. Landin told Mr. Viaches that she believed that
he was discriminating against her because of her age and sex. Mr. Viaches responded that
7
Later in her summary judgment response, Ms. Landin refers to an incident in May 2016,
where Ms. Landin and Ms. Schust disagreed on how best to schedule an executive retreat. Ms.
Schust complained to Mr. Viaches about Ms. Landin’s behavior, and Mr. Viaches allegedly
directed Mr. McGuirk to write up Ms. Landin. It is not clear whether Mr. McGuirk ever did so.
12
“that’s bull. That’s not true,” and the conversation ended. Ms. Landin also reported her belief
that Mr. Viaches was discriminating against her to DaVita’s “People Services” (apparently, its
Human Resources department). Although Ms. Landin’s brief states that she “did not know that
her [complaint] had been investigated at all,” she testified that she had a telephone conversation
with a representative from People Services.
On July 18, 2016, Ms. Landin tendered her resignation to DaVita. In her brief, she states
that this was “because of Mr. Viaches’ favoritism of his younger Executive Assistants, his
constant criticisms of her, and his hostility after she spoke with DaVita’s counsel” about the coworker’s claims. In her deposition, she acknowledged that she was not being threatened with
termination and had not received any “corrective actions,” but that she felt she had to leave “due
to the hostile work environment that [Mr. Viaches] was creating for me.”
Based on these facts, Ms. Landin asserts seven claims: (i) age discrimination in violation
of the ADEA; (ii) age discrimination in violation of CADA; (iii) sex discrimination in violation
of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act; (iv) sex discrimination in violation of CADA; (v) retaliation
for engaging in protected activity, in violation of the ADEA; (vi) retaliation for engaging in
protected activity, in violation of CADA; and (vii) retaliation for engaging in protected activity
in violation of Title VII.
DaVita seeks summary judgment on all of Ms. Landin’s claims. As to her claims of age
and sex discrimination, DaVita primarily argues that Ms. Landin cannot show that she suffered
an adverse employment action; in response, Ms. Landin contends that her resignation was a
constructive discharge, and that she was subjected to counseling and criticism for her job
performance, and was given a performance review that was “negatively influenced by Mr.
Viaches’ feedback” and denied a raise therefor. She also contends that she was paid less than
13
younger workers, demonstrating discrimination on the basis of her age,8 and DaVita responds
that she lacks evidence to show that she was paid less than younger Executive Assistants. As to
her retaliation claims, DaVita argues that Ms. Landin cannot show that she suffered any adverse
employment action and cannot show that any such actions were causally connected to her
protected conduct.
a. Sex discrimination claims
The Court begins by summarily granting summary judgment to DaVita on Ms. Landin’s
sex discrimination claims. Even assuming that any or all of Ms. Landin’s claimed adverse
actions suffice for a prima facie case, Ms. Landin has not come forward with any evidence that
suggests that any of the conduct directed against her was because of her sex. All of the
Executive Assistants she alleges were treated more favorably than she was are female, and she
has not identified any allegedly sex-based comments made by Mr. Viaches towards her or
anyone else. The only evidence Ms. Landin can proffer on the issue of sex discrimination is that
she is female and Mr. Viaches, the alleged decisionmaker, is male. This is insufficient to
establish a prima facie case of sex discrimination.9
8
Ms. Landin makes a single-paragraph argument that she was paid less than similarlysituated male employees in “Pegasus,” an otherwise undefined work unit. Ms. Landin’s
deposition discusses the Pegasus unit only briefly, explaining that “Marissa [otherwise
unidentified] does way more work than Jeff [otherwise unidentified] does, and she’s paid way
less than Jeff.” It does not appear that Marissa or Jeff are Executive Assistants, or that Ms.
Landin has any other evidence to support a contention that she herself was subjected to pay
discrimination on the basis of her sex. Thus, the Court does not explore this claim further.
9
This also suffices to dispose of Ms. Landin’s Title VII retaliation claim. Even under the
“mistaken good-faith belief” standard of Love v. RE/MAX of America, Inc., 738 F.2d383, 385
(10th Cir. 1984), Ms. Landin could not have harbored a good faith belief that Mr. Viaches’
conduct constituted sex discrimination. She has identified no meaningful facts that would allow
her to form a reasonable belief that Mr. Viaches’ conduct towards her was based on her sex.
14
b. Age discrimination claims
(i) adverse employment action
That leaves her claims for age discrimination. As to those claims, the Court first
considers Ms. Landin’s contentions that she was constructively discharged to establish the
existence of an adverse employment action. A constructive discharge occurs where, because of
an employer’s discriminatory conduct, “the working conditions become so intolerable that a
reasonable person in the employee’s position would have felt compelled to resign.” Green v.
Brennan, 136 S.Ct. 1769, 1776-77 (2016). The Court’s evaluation of a constructive discharge
claim “disregard[s] both the employee’s subjective view of the workplace environment and the
employer’s subjective intentions regarding the employee.” Sotunde v. Safeway, Inc., 716
Fed.Appx. 758, 768 (10th Cir. 2017). It is not enough to show that the working conditions were
“difficult or unpleasant”; the employee must show that, objectively, a reasonable person would
have viewed the working conditions as intolerable. Id.
The Court finds that Ms. Landin has not demonstrated a triable issue as to whether she
was constructively discharged. The crux of Ms. Landin’s situation is that she sometimes had
difficulties in getting along with her younger co-workers, and that Mr. Viaches would – perhaps
unfairly -- take the co-workers’ side when disputes arose. These circumstances might be
“difficult or unpleasant” for a conscientious employee, but they fall far short of being
“intolerable.” See e.g. Sotunde, 716 Fed.Appx. at 769 (poor performance reviews, a manager
discrediting the employees work and spreading rumors that the employee “would not be there
much longer,” and the employer’s failure to investigate complaints of discrimination did not
amount to constructive discharge); Sanchez v. Denver Pub. Schools, 164 F.3d 527, 534 (10th Cir.
1998) (employer favoring younger co-workers did not amount to constructive discharge). Ms.
15
Landin had an array of options to deal with the situation that stopped short of resignation: she
could simply avoid conflict with her co-workers (and thus criticism by Mr. Viaches), by working
the way they wanted to, even if that meant doing tasks inefficiently. She could have followed up
on her single complaint of discrimination to People Services, sought assistance from Mr.
Viaches’ own supervisors, or asked Mr. McGuirk or others to intercede with Mr. Viaches on her
behalf. She could have requested a transfer or reassignment of certain job duties to remove the
need to interact with the troublesome co-workers. Or she could have simply bided her time,
unpleasant as that might have been, given that she was never threatened with termination or
subjected to any significant discipline. The Court does not intend to disparage the frustration that
Ms. Landin must have felt, being treated with disrespect by her co-workers and supervisor
despite being skilled and efficient at her job. But the standard for establishing a constructive
discharge is a considerable one, and the fact that Ms. Landin was criticized, even unfairly, on a
handful of occasions by Mr. Viaches fails, as a matter of law, to rise to that standard.
Ms. Landin argues that several cases from the 10th Circuit would support a finding that
she could establish a claim for constructive discharge. The Court finds the cases inapposite. In
Acrey v. American Sheep Industry Ass’n, 981 F.2d 1569, 1573-74 (10th Cir. 1992), the court
affirmed a jury’s finding of constructive discharge where two different supervisors urged the
employee to quit and threatened her with discharge if she did not. Similarly, in Spulak v. K Mart
Corp., 894 F.2d 1150, 1152-1154 (10th Cir. 1990), there was evidence that an employee’s
manager threatened to fire the employee, stated that the employee was “fired or going to be
fired,” and gave the employee an ultimatum to either take early retirement or be fired and lose
his benefits. Accord Burk v. Oklahoma Pub. Co., 81 F.3d 975, 978 (10th Cir. 1996) (considering
whether constructive discharge jury instruction is appropriate where evidence shows that
16
employee “truly was presented with a choice between resigning or being fired”). These cases are
clearly distinguishable from the facts presented by Ms. Landin here. Mr. Viaches’ criticism of
Ms. Landin’s performance never rose to the level of a request for Ms. Landin’s resignation or
threatening her with termination if she did not resign. Thus, the Court finds that Ms. Landin has
not come forward with evidence sufficient to create a triable issue of whether she was
constructively discharged; rather, the evidence establishes that her resignation was voluntary.
Turning to the other examples of alleged adverse employment actions, the Court first
considers Ms. Landin’s allegation that DaVita paid younger Executive Assistants a higher salary
than it paid her. The sole support for this contention is a statement by Ms. Landin that, at some
point during her employment, she received a document from a co-worker that showed the
salaries of various Assistants, and that Ms. Landin’s salary was lower than that paid to her
younger co-workers. Ms. Landin testified that she no longer has this document and that she did
not know whether it was an official DaVita payroll document or from some other source. She
attests to no other personal knowledge of her co-workers’ salaries. DaVita, on the other hand,
has produced an affidavit that specifically recites the salaries of each of the Executive Assistants,
showing that Ms. Landin earned more the Ms. Lischer and Ms. Schust, and that the only
Assistant paid more than Ms. Landin was Janelle Ramos, who is only one year younger than Ms.
Landin. Ms. Landin has not come forward with evidence that disputes that produced by DaVita,
and thus, the Court finds that Ms. Landin has not shown that she suffered an adverse
employment action in the form of being paid less than younger co-workers.
Finally, the Court considers whether Mr. Viaches criticizing her work or favoring
complaints against her by her co-workers arises to the level of an adverse employment action.
To be sufficiently adverse, an employment action must be material, amounting to a firing, failure
17
to promote, reassignment with significantly different duties, or a decision causing a significant
change in benefits. Hiatt v. Colorado Seminary, 858 F.3d 1307, 1316 (10th Cir. 2017). Events
such as counseling, criticism, or a verbal warning do not typically rise to the level of adverse
actions, absent a showing that they affected an employee’s pay or prospects for advancement or
discipline. See Anderson v. Clovis Mun. Schools, 265 Fed.Appx. 699, 704 (10th Cir. 2008).
Most of Mr. Viaches’ criticisms of Ms. Landin would not suffice under this standard, but the
Court notes that on two occasions, once in late 2015 and again in conjunction with her
performance review in March 2016, Mr. Viaches refused to approve Ms. Landin for a raise that
had been recommended for her. Because the denial of a raise can constitute a significant change
in pay or benefits, the Court finds that Ms. Landin has sufficiently demonstrated that Mr.
Viaches’ refusal of raises for her constitute adverse employment actions.
(b) circumstances giving rise to an inference/pretext
The next question is whether the denial of those raises occurred in circumstances giving
rise to an inference of age discrimination. At a minimum, the March 2016 denial of a raise to
Ms. Landin permits such an inference, insofar as Ms. Landin alleges that younger co-workers
were given a raise, yet she was not. DaVita contends that Ms. Landin lacks personal knowledge
that the other Assistants received raises, but her deposition testimony is clear that “the other
[Assistants] got a raise, and I didn’t.” The record does not reflect an exploration into Ms.
Landin’s basis for that knowledge, and the Court will not speculate one way or the other as to
how she came to that knowledge. Notably, DaVita has not come forward with evidence that
establishes that the other Assistants did not receive raises in March 2016.
DaVita’s motion papers do not address the reasons why Ms. Landin was refused a raise in
March 2016, and thus, the Court need not move onto the pretext stage. Ms. Landin’s age
18
discrimination claims will proceed to trial, limited to the issue of Mr. Viaches’ denial of a raise
for her in March 2016.
c. Retaliation claims
That leaves Ms. Landin’s claims for retaliation for complaining of age discrimination, in
violation of the ADEA and CADA. Although the record reflects that Ms. Landin formally
complained of age discrimination to Mr. Viaches (and then DaVita’s People Services) in June
2016, Ms. Landin’s summary judgment briefing does not identify this event as supporting her
ADEA and CADA retaliation claims.10 Rather, she focuses on her March 2016 discussion with
DaVita’s legal team, in which she stated her support for a co-worker’s pending suit against
DaVita.11 Thus, the Court examines whether Ms. Landin can establish a prima facie case of
retaliation with regard to that protected activity.
Ms. Landin seems to argue that Mr. Viaches increased his criticism of Ms. Landin as a
result of her supporting Ms. Oldershaw’s lawsuit in the discussion with DaVita’s legal team. But
10
Even if Ms. Landin did premise her retaliation claims on her June 2016 complaints of
discrimination to Mr. Viaches, for the reasons stated above, the Court would find that Ms.
Landin has not shown that DaVita took any adverse employment action against her thereafter.
The only meaningful event remaining in the chronology at that point was her resignation in July
2016, which the Court has already determined does not amount to a constructive discharge.
11
The record is unclear as to whether there are facts to support the statutory basis for such a
claim. The Court understands that the conversation between Ms. Landin and DaVita concerned
whether Ms. Landin would give a deposition in pending litigation between DaVita and employee
Kelsey Oldershaw. As far as the Court can discern, the only pending litigation involving Ms.
Oldershaw and DaVita at this point in time would have been Oldershaw v. DaVita Healthcare
Partners, Inc., D.C. Colo. L. Civ. Case No. 15-cv-01964. That case concerns allegations that
DaVita was failing to pay overtime wages required by the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”),
29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq. To the extent that Ms. Landin alleges that she was retaliated against for
assisting in Ms. Oldershaw’s FLSA lawsuit, the appropriate statutory vehicle is not the ADEA’s
(or CADA’s, or Title VII’s) anti-retaliation provisions, but rather, the FLSA’s. 29 U.S.C. §
215(a)(3). Ms. Landin has not alleged FLSA retaliation, but DaVita has not challenged her
retaliation claims on this basis. Ultimately, for the reasons set forth above, the Court need not
resolve this particular puzzle.
19
as DaVita points out, Ms. Landin has not alleged, and apparently cannot allege, that Mr. Viaches
ever actually knew about her discussions with DaVita’s legal team. Ms. Landin acknowledged
in her deposition testimony that neither Mr. McGuirk nor Mr. Viaches was present during her
discussions with DaVita’s legal team, and that after that meeting, she did not discuss the meeting
with either Mr. McGuirk or Mr. Viaches.12 She acknowledges that, when she alleges that Mr.
Viaches stepped up his criticism of her after she met with the legal team, she is only speculating
that Mr. Viaches knew of that meeting. Mr. Viaches has submitted his own affidavit denying
any knowledge of any discussions Ms. Landin had with DaVita’s legal team until after she had
already resigned. Thus, Ms. Landin has failed to come forward with evidence that creates a
genuine dispute of fact as to whether Mr. Viaches was aware of her discussions with DaVita’s
legal team. That defect is fatal to her retaliation claim(s), as no inference of causation can arise
without a showing that the decisionmaker actually knew of the employee’s protected conduct.
Petersen v. Utah Dep't of Corr., 301 F.3d 1182, 1188 (10th Cir. 2002). Accordingly, DaVita is
entitled to summary judgment on Ms. Landin’s retaliation claims.
Thus, the Court grants DaVita’s motion for summary judgment against Ms. Landin in all
respects, save for Ms. Landin’s claims of age discrimination under the ADEA and CADA with
regard to the denial of her raise in March 2106. Only that portion of those claims will proceed to
trial.
12
Ms. Landin points to another portion of her deposition, where she indicates that she
talked to Mr. McGuirk about whether Ms. Oldershaw should retain an attorney. It is not clear
from the record when this discussion occurred – e.g. before or after Ms. Landin’s discussions
with DaVita’s legal team (one would assume before Ms. Oldershaw commenced the 2015
lawsuit, as she was represented by counsel thereafter) . Ultimately, the Court need not consider
the matter further because Ms. Landin does not allege that she ever had such discussions with
Mr. Viaches (or even that Mr. McGuirk conveyed her sentiments to Mr. Viaches).
20
5. Ms. Navarro’s claims
Ms. Navarro was hired by DaVita in 2003 and worked there until December 2015. At the
times pertinent herein, she held the position of Facility Administrator, responsible for managing
employees and operations at DaVita’s Westminster, Colorado facility. Her direct supervisor was
initially James Hein and later Jan Sheetz, both of whom were supervised by Paul Asper.
Ms. Navarro contends that, upon assuming indirect supervision over her in 2013, Mr.
Asper was unjustifiably critical of her performance. In January 2014, Mr. Asper told her that he
expected that she would not have any of her employees defect to a competitor, a requirement that
she believed was impossible, given budget restrictions and a lack of corporate support. Ms.
Navarro did her best, but in September 2014, Ms. Asper criticized her for the performance of the
Westminster clinic and placed Ms. Navarro on a Performance Improvement Plan (“PIP”).
During that discussion, Mr. Asper observed that Ms. Navarro was not a “team player,”
because she was not attending informal, off-duty social events and gatherings of DaVita
employees. Ms. Navarro stated that she felt uncomfortable attending such events, because the
events often involved often heavy drinking and pressure to consume alcohol. Ms. Navarro
explained that she has a seizure disorder, and that as a result, she does not drink. Mr. Asper
replied that he did not expect her to “booze it up” at the gatherings, and Ms. Navarro responded
that “it seemed to me that he did.”
Ms. Navarro successfully completed her PIP in November 2014, and in early 2015, she
was promoted to Facility Administrator. Nevertheless, she continued to struggle with an
inadequate budget for her clinic and seeming indifference from Mr. Asper. In October 2015, Ms.
Sheetz placed Ms. Navarro on a second PIP, directing her to improve her facility’s DQI score –
an internal measure of a facility’s patient outcomes – within 45 days. Ms. Navarro remarked that
21
because DQI scores measured 90-day periods, it would be impossible to show improvement
during the PIP period. Ms. Sheetz agreed, but encouraged Ms. Navarro to nevertheless attempt
to show some improvement. In December 2015, Ms. Sheetz met again with Ms. Navarro,
acknowledging that she had been harsh on Ms. Navarro in order to cause her to quit, and stated
that Ms. Asper did not want Ms. Navarro to continue working for DaVita. Ms. Sheetz said that if
Ms. Navarro did not resign, Ms. Asper would find a way to terminate her. Ms. Navarro then
tendered her resignation.13
Based on these facts, Ms. Navarro asserts six claims: (i) sex discrimination in violation of
Title VII; (ii) sex discrimination in violation of CADA; (iii) disability discrimination in violation
of the ADA; (iv) disability discrimination in violation of CADA; (v) retaliation for engaging in
protected activity, in violation of the ADA; and (vi) retaliation for engaging in protected activity
(on the basis of disability), in violation of CADA.
DaVita seeks summary judgment on all of Ms. Navarro’s claims. As to her sex
discrimination claims, it contends that she cannot demonstrate that her termination arose in
circumstances giving rise to an inference of sex discrimination or show that its proffered reason
for her termination – poor performance – is a pretext for sex discrimination. As to her disability
claims, it contends that she cannot show that she is “disabled,” as defined by the ADA, cannot
show that she was qualified for her position, cannot show that her termination occurred in
circumstances giving rise to an inference of discrimination, or show that DaVita’s reason for her
termination was pretextual. As to her retaliation claim, DaVita alleges that she cannot show a
causal connection between her revealing her medical condition to Mr. Asper and her termination.
13
DaVita takes the position that it terminated Ms. Navarro’s employment.
22
a. Sex discrimination claims
The Court accepts that Ms. Navarro has established the first three components of a prima
facie case of sex discrimination – that she is female, that she met the minimum objective
qualifications for her position, and that she suffered an adverse employment action, namely
termination. The Court then turns to the question of whether she can show that her termination
occurred in circumstances giving rise to an inference of sex discrimination. An employee
seeking to satisfy this element may do so in a variety of ways: by showing discriminatory
comments by decisionmakers, showing that similarly-situated male employees were treated more
favorably, by showing that the employee was replaced with a male, or, more generally, by
showing suspicious timing or sequences of events leading up to the termination. Plotke v. White,
405 F.3d 1092, 1101 (10th Cir. 2005).
Ms. Navarro’s summary judgment brief on this point first digresses into a complaint that
DaVita “refused to turn over critical evidence relating to” various subjects, “warranting denial of
[DaVita’s motion] pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(d).” The Court finds that Ms. Navarro has not
made the showing necessary to obtain relief pursuant to Rule 56(d). See generally Milam v.
Pafford EMS, 729 Fed.Appx. 632, 635 (10th Cir. 2018) (requiring an affidavit explaining why
facts cannot be presented, the probable facts that exist, what steps were reasonably taken to
obtain those facts, and a showing that the requesting party had not been dilatory in obtaining
them). Among other things, Ms. Navarro blames DaVita moving to quash her notice for a Fed.
R. Civ. P. 30(b)(6) deposition, served on the eve of the discovery deadline, arguing that such a
deposition would have yielded the information she needs to oppose summary judgment. The
motion to quash was granted (# 65) by the Magistrate Judge a few days before Ms. Navarro filed
her summary judgment response. Ms. Navarro did not thereafter seek to reopen discovery or
23
otherwise obtain the information she seeks. Thus, even if the Court were to grant Ms. Navarro
additional time to marshal evidence in opposition to DaVita’s motion, the record reflects that she
would be unable to do so. Accordingly, the Court denies her request for relief under Rule 56(d).
Ms. Navarro proffers several items that, she contends, suggest Mr. Asper’s sex-based bias
against her. The Court briefly examines each. First, she recites an instance from 2013, when she
provided Mr. Asper with extensive information relating to a DaVita initiative, only to have Mr.
Asper “not meaningfully respond and admit[ ] he had not looked at the reports.” At best, this
suggests that Mr. Asper might be a neglectful, indifferent, or non-communicative manager, but it
does not give any reason to suggest that Mr. Asper ignored the reports because of Ms. Navarro’s
sex. Next, Ms. Navarro points to Ms. Sheetz’ alleged statement that Ms. Asper did not like Ms.
Navarro. Putting aside the hearsay problems with such an assertion – Ms. Navarro has not
offered any affidavit or testimony from Ms. Sheetz acknowledging such a statement, making it
impossible for the Court to treat the statement “Ms. Asper did not like me” as true – again, the
mere fact that Mr. Asper did not like Ms. Navarro does not permit an inference that it was
because of her sex; Mr. Asper may not have liked Ms. Navarro’s personality, her performance,
her attitude, or any of a host of characteristics unrelated to her sex.
That leaves Ms. Navarro’s argument that she was treated less favorably than similarlysituated male employees by Ms. Asper. She points to three males in particular. First, she notes
that Cole Casey was “promoted to [Facility Administrator] after only three months as an
[Assistant],” apparently in contrast to Ms. Navarro who apparently spent two years as an
Assistant before being promoted. Beyond that bare statement, and her assumption that her
facility’s QCI scores were higher than Mr. Casey’s (because Ms. Navarro’s QCI scores were the
highest in Colorado), Ms. Navarro does not demonstrate how she would be similarly-situated to
24
Mr. Casey in any other respect. She admitted in her deposition that she was not familiar with
Mr. Casey’s performance evaluations nor was aware of the criteria by which Mr. Casey’s facility
was measured. Without a showing that she was similarly-situated to Mr. Casey in all material
respects relating to the decision to promote an Assistant to Facility Administrator, Ms. Navarro
has not shown that Mr. Casey’s situation permits an inference of sex discrimination to be drawn.
See Aramburu v. Boeing Co., 112 F.3d 1398, 1404 (10th Cir. 1997).
Ms. Navarro also points to Nathan Gabor. Mr. Gabor was issued a PIP by Mr. Asper in
March 2015 and was asked to resign in July 2015, due to ongoing performance problems. It
appears that Ms. Navarro believes that Mr. Gabor was treated more favorably than she was
because DaVita gave Mr. Gabor one month to find another job at DaVita in lieu of termination,
whereas it did not give her an opportunity to look for other work within DaVita. However, given
that Ms. Navarro was on her second PIP when she was terminated, whereas Mr. Gabor was on
his first, the Court cannot conclude that Mr. Gabor and Ms. Navarro were similarly-situated in all
material respects. Moreover, as DaVita notes, the performance deficiencies that DaVita noted in
Mr. Gabor’s PIP and in Ms. Navarro’s are different, with Ms. Navarro’s citing to criticism she
was receiving from her subordinates whereas Mr. Gabor’s cited his lack of knowledge of
DaVita’s processes. Under these circumstances, the Court cannot say that Ms. Navarro has sown
that she was similarly situated to Mr. Gabor, such that the different ways in which their
terminations were handled reflects sex discrimination on Mr. Asper’s part.
Finally, Ms. Navarro points to Jim Winders. She contends that Mr. Asper acknowledged
that she was paid less than Mr. Winders, and that Mr. Winders was not criticized for failing to
attend off-premises social gatherings. Ms. Navarro’s deposition makes clear that she has no
knowledge of whether Mr. Asper was criticized or disciplined for not attending social gatherings,
25
making that argument irrelevant. As to the mere fact that Ms. Navarro was paid less than Mr.
Winders, Ms. Navarro has offered no additional evidence to show that she was similarly-situated
to Mr. Winders in all other respects, such that differential pay rates could only be explained by
sex discrimination. Thus, Ms. Navarro’s attempts to compare herself to male employees fails to
warrant an inference that Mr. Asper discriminated against her on the basis of her sex.
Lastly, Ms. Navarro states that her co-Plaintiff, Ms. Stant, also “was targeted for
termination” by Mr. Asper, and that Ms. Stant knew of another woman, Sandi Vanek, who was
terminated at Mr. Asper’s request. As to Ms. Vanek, Ms. Navarro offers only Ms. Stant’s
hearsay testimony about what Ms. Vanek told Ms. Stant. And Ms. Navarro offers no meaningful
summary of Ms. Stant’s own interactions with Mr. Asper.14
Accordingly, the Court finds that Ms. Navarro has failed to establish a prima facie case
of sex discrimination and DaVita is entitled to summary judgment on those claims.
b. Disability discrimination/retaliation claims
The Court will bypass DaVita’s arguments that Ms. Navarro cannot show that she is
disabled for purposes of the ADA and cannot show that she met the minimum qualifications for
her position. Instead, the Court finds that Ms. Navarro’s ADA claims fail at the fourth step of
the prima facie case, because Ms. Navarro cannot show that her termination occurred in
circumstances giving rise to an inference that it was based on her seizure disorder. As the
recitation above suggests, Mr. Asper criticized Ms. Navarro for not attending DaVita social
gatherings, and Ms. Navarro explained that her disorder prevented her from drinking. Mr. Asper
responded that she was not required to drink in order to attend the social events. Ms. Navarro
14
The Court declines to comb through Ms. Stant’s response in support of her own claims to
ascertain whether there are facts there that could assist Ms. Navarro. The parties chose to present
each individual Plaintiffs’ claims separately for purposes of dispositive motions, and thus, the
Court treats each motion independently of each other.
26
has not come forward with evidence that shows that Mr. Asper’s statement was somehow untrue
– for example, she does not contend that she subsequently attended a gathering and was forced to
drink alcohol. Thus, the record reflects that she was given specific permission by Mr. Asper to
not drink at the social gatherings because of her disorder. In such circumstances, the Court
cannot draw any inference that Ms. Navarro’s medical disorder was related to her termination,
and DaVita is entitled to summary judgment on her disability discrimination claims.
Similar reasoning dispels Ms. Navarro’s disability retaliation claims. Assuming –
without necessarily finding – that Ms. Navarro’s report of her condition to Mr. Asper constitutes
protected activity under the ADA, the record reflects that, rather than retaliating against her, Mr.
Asper specifically accommodated her seizure disorder by telling her that she did not have to
drink alcohol at the social gatherings. In any event, the record also reflects that Ms. Navarro
cannot show any causal connection between her discussion of her condition with Mr. Asper in
September 2014 and her termination more than a year later (or, for that matter, her placement on
the second PIP in October 2015). A causal connection between the protected conduct and
adverse action can be inferred if they occur in close temporal proximity – say, less than three
months; otherwise, a plaintiff alleging retaliation must come forward with additional evidence
demonstrating causation. Winston v. Ross, 725 Fed.Appx. 659, 665 (10th Cir. 2018). Ms.
Navarro has not come forward with evidence to suggest that the decision to place her on a PIP
and ultimately terminate her was caused by her discussion of her condition with Mr. Asper.
Accordingly, DaVita is entitled to summary judgment on all of Ms. Navarro’s claims.
For the reasons discussed above, judgment pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b) shall enter
immediately.
27
6. Ms. Oldershaw’s claims
Ms. Oldershaw was hired by DaVita as an Executive Assistant in 2014, and later was
named a Divisional Coordinator,15 primarily supporting Benjamin Stapleton, Brain Saito, and Ian
Wong. They, in turn, were supervised by Margaret Anderson.
In March 2015, Ms. Oldershaw was issued a performance evaluation that contained both
praise and identified areas for improvement. She was given an overall grade of “meets
expectations,” and was awarded a merit raise.
In May 2015, Ms. Oldershaw requested leave time off to undergo surgery and recovery.
When she informed Mr. Stapleton, he was unhappy about it and responded that the timing was
inconvenient, given an upcoming business event. He asked what the surgery was for, and when
Ms. Oldershaw informed him that it had to do with her reproductive organs, he “got red” and
immediately responded that he didn’t want to hear any more. Thereafter, Mr. Stapleton began
criticizing grammatical and punctuation mistakes in e-mails that Ms. Oldershaw sent, and
criticized her for calling to ask him questions.
On July 4, 2015, Ms. Oldershaw complained to Human Resources representative Kelly
Kolb that Mr. Stapleton was “retaliating against” her.16 On July 6, 2015, on the eve of her
surgery, Ms. Oldershaw again spoke to Mr. Stapleton about her impending absence. Mr.
15
There is some dispute between the parties as to whether the Divisional Coordinator
position was a demotion or lateral transfer from the Executive Assistant position. This dispute
need not be resolved for purposes of this Order.
16
Curiously, Ms. Oldershaw cites only to Mr. Stapleton’s deposition in support of this fact,
not her own. Mr. Stapleton states that Ms. Oldershaw “mentioned to Kelly Kolb [an HR
Representative] in or around July 4 . . . that she was being retaliated against.” Later, Ms.
Oldershaw cites to Ms. Kolb’s deposition testimony about this same complaint. Ms. Kolb
testified that Ms. Oldershaw “stated that she felt like [Mr. Stapleton] was – I can’t remember the
wording exactly, whether it was harassing behavior or the environment, something to that
effect.”
28
Stapleton again repeated that her absence would be inconvenient. Then he advised her that, due
to performance problems, he was placing her on a PIP.
Ms. Oldershaw returned from her leave on or about July 12, 2015. Mr. Stapleton
continued to send her e-mails critiquing the contents of e-mails she was sending, and on July 22,
2015, called her and told her that she was not showing improvement and should consider looking
for another job. Mr. Stapleton also directed that Ms. Oldershaw’s access to DaVita’s network be
terminated for several days, effectively ending her ability to perform her duties. DaVita formally
terminated Ms. Oldershaw’s employment on August 3, 2015.
Based on these allegations, Ms. Oldershaw asserts seven claims: (i) sex discrimination
under Title VII, (ii) sex discrimination under CADA; (iii) disability discrimination under the
ADA; (iv) disability discrimination under CADA; (v) retaliation for engaging in protected
activity under the ADA; (vi) retaliation for engaging in protected activity under CADA; and (vii)
retaliation for engaging in protected activity under Title VII.17
As to the sex discrimination claims, DaVita moves for summary judgment contending
that Ms. Oldershaw cannot show that she was qualified for her position,18 that she was
terminated under circumstances giving rise to an inference of sex discrimination, or that
DaVita’s proffered reason for her termination – poor performance – is pretextual. As to the
17
The Court notes that Ms. Oldershaw has not invoked either the anti-discrimination or
anti-retaliation provisions of the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”), 29 U.S.C. § 2615(a).
18
The Court reflexively rejects this argument in nearly all the forms that DaVita urges it.
For purposes of a prima facie case, Ms. Oldershaw need only show that she met the minimum
objective requirements for her job – e.g. a certain educational degree or a designated number of
years of experience. EEOC v. Horizon/CMS Healthcare Corp., 220 F.3d 1184, 1193-94 (10th
Cir. 2000). She is not required to show that she was performing the job to DaVita’s satisfaction,
as that conflates the minimal requirements of the prima facie case with the question of whether
an employer’s performance-based explanation for an adverse action is pretextual. Kenworthy v.
Conoco, Inc., 979 F.2d 1462, 1470 (10th Cir. 1992) (“the employer's reasons for the adverse
action are not appropriately brought as a challenge to the sufficiency of the plaintiff's prima facie
case”).
29
disability discrimination claims, DaVita contends that Ms. Oldershaw cannot show that she is
disabled or that DaVita regarded her as such, that she was qualified for her position, or that her
termination occurred in circumstances giving rise to an inference of disability discrimination. As
to her retaliation claims, DaVita alleges that Ms. Oldershaw cannot show a causal connection
between her request for time off for surgery and her termination, and cannot show that DaVita’s
reasons for her termination are pretextual.
a. Sex discrimination claims
Assuming that Ms. Oldershaw establishes all the other elements of her prima facie case,
the Court agrees with DaVita that she has failed to come forward with any evidence that permits
a reasonable inference that Mr. Stapleton terminated her because of her sex. Ms. Oldershaw
does not point to sexist comments by Mr. Stapleton or point to any particular evidence that
would indicate that his actions towards Ms. Oldershaw were motivated by sexist bias. Ms.
Oldershaw does not identify similarly-situated male Divisional Coordinators whom Mr.
Stapleton treated more favorably.19 Ms. Oldershaw appears to rely upon “the timing and
sequence of events,” pointing to “issuance of a PIP shortly after Ms. Oldershaw’s request for
19
Ms. Oldershaw’s brief contains a single sentence and citation referencing “another
teammate who used inappropriate language in e-mails,” to whom Mr. Stapleton issued only a
written warning rather than a PIP. She does not describe the teammate, the circumstances, or
anything else to put this event in any kind of context. It is Ms. Oldershaw’s obligation to
sufficiently set forth the pertinent evidence, and the Court is not obligated to comb the record for
her. Adler v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 144 F.3d 664, 671 (10th Cir. 1998).
Even if the Court were to consider several additional pages of Mr. Stapleton’s deposition
transcript on this point, it would learn that the “teammate” in question was Andy Kulyk, a male,
who was “a vice president who does business development.” Mr. Kulyk was being issued a
warning, rather than a PIP, in part because Mr. Stapleton was correcting a specific incident of
Mr. Kulyk not complying with DaVita standards, not a situation where Mr. Kulyk’s overall
performance was unsatisfactory. Moreover, Mr. Stapleton explained that the decision to give
Mr. Kulyk a written warning was made by “our entire compliance team.” Thus, to the extent
Ms. Oldershaw seeks to compare herself to Mr. Kulyk, she has not shown that they shared a
similar job title or responsibilities, that they violated rules of comparable seriousness, and that
the disciplinary decisions in question were made by the same supervisor.
30
time off . . . and termination less than a month later.” But while such timing might be indicative
of some form of animus, it does nothing to suggest that sex-based animus was at play. Civil
rights statutes are not all-purpose tools, used indiscriminately to strike at the heart of any
employment decision that might seem inappropriate or unfair; to the contrary, they are precise
instruments that are applicable only in narrowly-defined circumstance. It is the burden of a
plaintiff to invoke the proper statute and demonstrate the facts that warrant its application. Here,
because Ms. Oldershaw has not come forward with any evidence to suggest that Mr. Stapleton
treated her unfairly because she is female, she fails to demonstrate a triable prima facie case of
sex discrimination. DaVita is entitled to summary judgment on her claims for sex
discrimination.
b. Disability discrimination claims
DaVita contends that Ms. Oldershaw cannot show that she is a member of a class
protected by the ADA or CADA’s disability discrimination prohibitions, because she is not
“disabled” under those statutes’ definitions.
Under the ADA, an employee is “disabled” if they have a physical or mental impairment
that substantially limits one or more of their major life activities. 42 U.S.C. § 12012(1)(A). Ms.
Oldershaw has not argued that she suffered from any actual disability. Rather, under the ADA,
an employee who is not actually disabled is nevertheless protected by the statute if they are
“regarded as having such an impairment” by their employer. 42 U.S.C. § 12102(1)(C).
However, an employee who is regarded by their employer as having an impairment of “transitory
and minor” duration – one of “6 months or less” – is not considered “disabled” under the ADA.
42 U.S.C. § 12102(3)(B). The regulations implementing the ADA emphasize that the phrase
“transitory and minor” is to be read in the disjunctive – an employer does not regard an
31
employee as disabled only if its understanding is that the alleged impairment is both “transitory”
and also “minor.” 29 C.F.R. § 1630.15(f).20 There can be little dispute that Ms. Oldershaw’s
need for surgery and recovery was “transitory” – Ms. Oldershaw made clear to Mr. Stapleton
that she would need three days for surgery and three weeks to recover and there is nothing to
suggest that Mr. Stapleton misunderstood that duration. Thus, the only question is whether Mr.
Stapleton nevertheless considered Ms. Oldershaw’s impairment to be something other than
“minor.” Neither the ADA nor its regulations nor courts have attempted to offer a more precise
definition for the term “minor” in this context.
Ms. Oldershaw’s response on this issue is curious. She contends that Mr. Stapleton must
have regarded her as having more than a “minor” impairment because he “claim[ed] to HR [that]
Ms. Oldershaw would be ‘bedridden’ or ‘completely disabled’ after surgery.” In support of this
contention, Ms. Oldershaw points only to her own deposition testimony, which relates the
following events occurring on July 6, 2015, after she reminded Mr. Stapleton of her upcoming
surgery (and Mr. Stapleton mentioned that her absence would be “inconvenient”):
And then I went back to my desk. Shannon [Gibbons, an HR
representative] e-mailed me probably five minutes later and said:
You need to come to my office right now. Ben [Stapleton] just
came racing into my office – these were her exact words – and said
you were going to be, quote, bedridden for three weeks. So please
come talk to me privately. . . And Shannon’s e-mailing me that
Ben’s perceiving me to have this major, like, disability from some
surgery that I think I’m going to go back to work for three days
later. . . Because what Ben told her, I was going to be completely
disabled. And she was all of a sudden surprised by it.
20
The ADA’s implementing regulations seem to suggest that the “transitory and minor”
limitation is an affirmative defense on which the employer bears the burden of proof. See
Budhun v. Reading Hosp. and Medical Ctr., 765 F.3d 245, 259 (3d Cir. 2014). Regardless of
how one apportions the burden of proof here, the analysis and outcome is the same.
32
Several aspects of this recitation require unpacking. DaVita has produced (and Ms. Oldershaw
has confirmed) the e-mail Ms. Gibbons sent to Ms. Oldershaw that Ms. Oldershaw references. It
reads, in its entirety “Hey Kelsey, Ben just came [to] my office and mentioned that you might be
on leave for 3 weeks. Have you called Hartford and put in for a leave? You must apply for
FMLA and/or short-term disability. Please make sure you do this.” Obviously, the words
“bedridden” and “major disability” are not found in Ms. Gibbons’ e-mail (notwithstanding Ms.
Oldershaw’s assurance that “these were her exact words”). Parsing Ms. Oldershaw’s deposition
carefully, the Court understands her to be saying that Ms. Gibbons conveyed Mr. Stapleton’s
words to her orally, during a meeting Ms. Oldershaw had personally with Ms. Gibbons shortly
after the e-mail. (Ms. Gibbons’ testimony suggests that she met in person with Ms. Oldershaw
first, and the e-mail was just confirming the conversation). These alleged oral recitations by Ms.
Gibbons raise interesting hearsay issues, both in the Mr. Stapleton to Ms. Gibbons context, and
in Ms. Gibbons’ statements to Ms. Oldershaw. Ms. Oldershaw’s summary judgment response
elides the hearsay question entirely, even though she relies solely upon her own recitation of Ms.
Gibbons’ recitation of Mr. Stapleton’s statements.
The Court is loathe to form arguments for parties where the parties themselves have
failed to do so. Ultimately, however, it need not address the admissibility of these statements
because the Court finds that, even taking Ms. Oldershaw’s recitation of the discussion with Ms.
Gibbons as true and admissible, the evidence does not permit a conclusion that Mr. Stapleton
considered Ms. Oldershaw’s impairment to be anything other than “minor.” Careful review of
Ms. Oldershaw’s deposition testimony is that Mr. Stapleton’s words, conveyed through Ms.
Gibbons, were simply that Ms. Oldershaw would be “bedridden for three weeks.” Ms.
Oldershaw does not attribute the expression “major [ ] disability” to Mr. Stapleton or Ms.
33
Gibbons; rather, it reflects her characterization of what Ms. Gibbons said. Ms. Oldershaw makes
clear that “bedridden for three weeks” was Ms. Gibbons’ “exact words” and “quote[d].” But she
states that the expression “major, like, disability” was something mentioned in Ms. Gibbons’ email; as we see, that e-mail mentions “disability” only in the context of Ms. Oldershaw filing for
short-term disability benefits. Thus, the record permits only a finding that Mr. Stapleton may
have regarded Ms. Oldershaw’s impairment as being one that renders her “bedridden for three
weeks.” That statement alone, with its inherent temporal limitation, does not permit the
conclusion that Mr. Stapleton considered Ms. Oldershaw’s impairment to be anything more than
a minor and temporary inconvenience. Accord Horsham v. Fresh Direct, 136 F.Supp.3d 253,
263-64 (E.D.N.Y. 2015) (employer who understood employee to need six weeks to recover from
hernia surgery did not regard him as disabled; employer “perceived that Plaintiff had only a
temporary impairment”).
Accordingly, the Court finds that Ms. Oldershaw has not shown that she can establish the
first element of a prima facie case of disability discrimination under the ADA, because she was
not “disabled” for purposes of the statute’s coverage. Moreover, because CADA incorporates by
reference the ADA’s standards defining disability, her disability-based CADA claim fails as
well. C.R.S. § 24-34-301(5.6). DaVita is therefore entitled to summary judgment on her
disability discrimination claims.
c. Retaliation claims
DaVita’s challenge to Ms. Oldershaw’s retaliation claims is limited to the causal
connection element (and, ultimately, the question of pretext). This is problematic, as it assumes
the existence of conduct that, Ms. Oldershaw claims, is protected under Title VII (as to sex), the
ADA, and CADA (as to both sex and disability). It is not immediately apparent to the Court how
34
Ms. Oldershaw’s request for leave to undergo surgery is conduct that would be “opposing” sex
discrimination or “assist[ing] or participat[ing] in” a investigation or proceeding under Title VII
or CADA. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a). Moreover, given the discussion above, it is unclear that her
request for leave to undergo a surgery and brief recovery time would even be conduct protected
under the ADA (as opposed to, say, the FMLA). Thus, it is not entirely clear to the Court that
Ms. Oldershaw has engaged in any protected activity that would support any of her retaliation
claims. Nevertheless, as noted above, the Court avoids resolving matters on issues the parties
have not raised, and thus, the Court will assume – for purposes of this motion only – that Ms.
Oldershaw can establish that she engaged in protected activity under all three statutes.21
Turning to the question of causation, the 10th Circuit has recognized that close temporal
proximity between the protected conduct and adverse action – say, a period of six weeks -- can,
of itself, supply the requisite causal inference. Meiners v. Univ. of Kansas, 359 F.3d 1222, 1231
(10th Cir. 2004). Here, the parties appear to agree that Ms. Oldershaw’s protected conduct
occurred on or about July 6, 2015, when she reminded Mr. Stapleton of her need for time off for
her surgery. Mr. Stapleton advised her on July 22, 2015 that she needed to look for another job,
effectively terminating her on that date, and DaVita formally terminated her by August 3, 2015,
all within a roughly four-week period. Accordingly, the Court finds that Ms. Oldershaw has
demonstrated a causal connection sufficient to establish a prima face case of retaliation.
The Court need not extensively explore the question of pretext. DaVita claims that it
terminated Ms. Oldershaw for poor work performance. Ms. Oldershaw has come forward with
evidence that her work performance was adequate, including a performance review that rated her
21
Ms. Oldershaw is advised that the Court will closely scrutinize her Statement of Claims
in her Proposed Pretrial Order to determine whether she has sufficient facts to permit each of her
retaliation claims to proceed to trial. Those claims that lack a sufficiently-identified factual and
legal basis may be dismissed as insufficient at the time of the Pretrial Conference.
35
as “meets expectations” and a merit raise immediately before the events at issue. The record
reflects that although Mr. Stapleton gave Ms. Oldershaw 30 days to improve via the PIP, he
instructed her to begin looking for a job only a few days into that 30-day period, rather than
allowing her the allotted time to improve. Moreover, the close temporal proximity between Ms.
Oldershaw’s protected conduct and her termination is also demonstrative of pretext on DaVita’s
part. DePaula v. Easter Seals El Mirador, 859 F.3d 957, 976 (10th Cir. 2017) (temporal
proximity can be considered evidence of pretext in conjunction with other evidence suggesting
retaliatory motive). Accordingly, the Court finds that Ms. Oldershaw has demonstrated a
genuine dispute of fact with regard to the pretext element of her retaliation claims, and those
claims will proceed to trial.
7. Ms. Stant
Ms. Stant worked for DaVita for more than 25 years, finally occupying the position of
Regional Educator in 2011 when she was approximately 51 years old. She was supervised by
Tamyra Warmack, who was, in turn, supervised by Mr. Asper.
The events leading to Ms. Stant’s separation from DaVita began on December 4, 2015,
following a training seminar that Ms. Stant delivered to several trainees. Mr. Asper and
Elizabeth Wright spoke with the trainees after the seminar, asking about, among other things,
their impressions of the training. According to DaVita, all seven trainees (and others associated
with the training) reported negatively about Ms. Stant, complaining that Ms. Stant “screamed at
[them]” on the treatment floor, that she was “condescending” and “belittling,” and that she did
not seem to get along with her co-presenter, among other things. Mr. Asper and Ms. Wright
brought these concerns to Ms. Warmack’s attention, demanding that Ms. Stant be removed from
further training and that she be placed on final written warning status, the highest possible
36
discipline short of termination. Ms. Warmack reported the allegations to DaVita’s human
resources department for investigation.
The human resources department completed its investigation on or about December 18,
2015 and reported the results to Ms. Warmack, who conveyed them to Ms. Stant. Ms. Stant
states that Ms. Warmack confirmed that the allegations were found to be unfounded, but Ms.
Warmack told her that Ms. Asper still wanted her placed on final written warning status. Ms.
Stant asked “So eventually I’m going to be fired? So I should look for another position?,” and
Ms. Warmack agreed with her. Believing that her job was in jeopardy, Ms. Stant resigned her
employment with DaVita on February 19, 2016. She was 56 years old at that time.
Based on these facts, Ms. Stant brings four claims: (i) age discrimination in violation of
the ADEA; (ii) age discrimination in violation of CADA; (ii) sex discrimination in violation of
Title VII; and (iv) sex discrimination in violation of CADA.
DaVita seeks summary judgment on her claims, arguing that she cannot show that she
suffered an adverse employment action and cannot show that any such action occurred in
circumstances giving rise to an inference of discrimination.
Like Ms. Landin, Ms. Stant’s claims rise or fall depending on whether she has come
forward with a colorable claim that she was constructively discharged. The Court finds that she
has not. Putting aside all other evidence (including undisputed evidence that Mr. Asper left Ms.
Stant’s chain of command shortly after the initial event and that nobody else involved in that
chain is alleged to have actively continued to press for Ms. Stant to be disciplined), the record
reflects that Mr. Asper demanded only that Ms. Stant be placed on final written warning status,
not that she be terminated. The assumption that “eventually I’m going to be fired” is a
conclusion that Ms. Stant jumped to on her own and without any supporting evidence that the
37
situation was likely to persist beyond the single incident relating to specific training program.
Indeed, Ms. Warmack’s affidavit, which Ms. Stant relies upon, states that Ms. Warmack
believed that Mr. Asper “would more than likely continue to try and get her terminated,” but that
Ms. Warmack “was her supervisor and we would work [ ] together” with DaVita’s human
resources department to fight those efforts. Thus, even Ms. Stant’s own supervisor believed that
Ms. Stant had options short of resignation. In such circumstances, the Court cannot find that Ms.
Stant has come forward with evidence that could establish that, objectively, she had no other
choice but to quit. Compare Keller v. Crown Cork & Seal USA, Inc., 491 Fed.Appx. 908, 915
(10th Cir. 2012) (employee written up for poor performance and threatened with termination
failed to establish constructive discharge). Because Ms. Stant’s alleged constructive discharge is
the sole adverse employment action that supports all of her claims, DaVita is entitled to summary
judgment on all of those claims.
8. Summary
For these reasons, DaVita is entitled to summary judgment on all of Ms. Augustin, Ms.
Navarro, and Ms. Stant’s claims against it, and partial judgments pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P.
54(b) shall promptly enter against these Plaintiffs. Ms. Landin’s age discrimination claims under
the ADEA and CADA will proceed to trial, limited to the question of whether Mr. Viaches’
withholding of a raise she was otherwise eligible for was the product of age discrimination. Ms.
Oldershaw’s claims that she was terminated in retaliation for engaging in protected conduct
under Title VII, the ADA, and CADA will proceed to trial.22
22
Because Ms. Landin’s remaining claims share no common questions of law or fact with
Ms. Oldershaw’s claims, it is the Court’s intention to try their claims in separate trials before
separate juries. The parties shall prepare separate Proposed Pretrial Orders for each Plaintiff,
addressing only the scope of trial of that Plaintiff’s claims, although for purposes of expediency,
the Court will hold a single Pretrial Conference as to both Plaintiffs.
38
B. DaVita’s Motion to Amend
DaVita moves to amend its Answers against Ms. Oldershaw and Ms. Landin to include
an affirmative defense of after-acquired evidence. The doctrine of after-acquired evidence
creates an affirmative defense that allows an employer to avoid liability for frontpay and some
backpay damages if it shows that it discovered, mid-litigation, that a plaintiff engaged in
heretofore unknown misconduct during his or her employment that would have warranted the
employee’s termination had that conduct been known to the employer during the employment.
McKennon v. Nashville Banner Pub. Co., 513 U.S. 352, 361-62 (1995). Here, DaVita states that,
during discovery in this action, it learned that Ms. Oldershaw and Ms. Landin tape recorded
workplace conversations without permission, in violation of DaVita’s workplace rules. DaVita
argues that, had it known about Ms. Oldershaw’s and Ms. Landin’s actions, it would have
independently terminated their employment for those reasons.
As to Ms.Landin, because the Court grants summary judgment to DaVita on her claims
relating to her termination, this motion is moot. The relief that Ms. Landin can recover on her
remaining claims entails only a withheld raise, not frontpay (or even backpay that accrued after
DaVita learned of her recording activities).
Ms. Oldershaw argues in response to DaVita’s motion that DaVita’s proposed defense is
futile, as DaVita cannot show that, under its policies, termination (as opposed to lesser
discipline) would necessarily have resulted from DaVita learning that an employee was
surreptitiously recording workplace conversations. Ms. Oldershaw’s argument thus challenges
whether DaVita can prove its defense of after-acquired evidence, whereas the question before the
Court is whether DaVita should be allowed to plead that defense. Because DaVita has
articulated a colorable basis for raising the defense at this time, its motion is granted. Whether
39
the jury will ultimately be instructed on the defense is a matter that will be taken up at the time of
trial, based on the evidence presented.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS DaVita’s Motions for Summary Judgment
against Ms. Navarro (# 57), Ms. Augustin (# 60), and Ms. Stant (# 61). There being no just
reason to delay entry of judgment, the Clerk of the Court shall immediately enter partial
judgments in favor of DaVita and against these Plaintiffs pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b).
DaVita’s Motions for Summary Judgment against Ms. Landin (# 58) and Ms. Oldershaw
(# 59) are GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART as set forth herein. The parties
shall begin preparation of two Proposed Pretrial Orders, consistent with the requirements of the
Trial Preparation Order (# 24), with regard to the remaining claims and shall jointly contact
chambers to set a Pretrial Conference. The Court GRANTS DaVita’s Motion to Amend (# 38)
its Answer to assert an after-acquired evidence defense against Ms. Oldershaw’s claims, and the
Court deems DaVita’s Answer to be so amended.
The Court DENIES, AS MOOT DaVita’s Motion to Amend (# 50) its Answer as to Ms.
Landin.
Dated this 1st day of August, 2018.
BY THE COURT:
Marcia S. Krieger
Chief United States District Judge
40
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