Chang v. Straub Clinic and Hospital, Inc. et al
Filing
90
ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF'S MOTIONS FOR RECONSIDERATION OF THE ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT STRAUB CLINIC AND HOSPITAL'S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT 82 , 83 . Signed by JUDGE DERRICK K. WATSON on 2/21/2014. (ecs, )CERTI FICATE OF SERVICEParticipants registered to receive electronic notifications received this document electronically at the e-mail address listed on the Notice of Electronic Filing (NEF). Participants not registered to receive electronic notifications were served by first class mail on the date of this docket entry
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF HAWAI`I
CIVIL NO. 12-00617 DKW-RLP
MELVIN K. CHANG, M.D.,
Plaintiff,
vs.
STRAUB CLINIC & HOSPITAL,
INC., et al.
ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF’S
MOTIONS FOR
RECONSIDERATION
OF THE ORDER GRANTING
DEFENDANT STRAUB CLINIC
AND HOSPITAL’S MOTION FOR
SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Defendants.
ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF’S MOTIONS FOR RECONSIDERATION
OF THE ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT STRAUB CLINIC
AND HOSPITAL’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
On January 7, 2014, the Court granted Defendant Straub Clinic and
Hospital’s (“Defendant” or “Straub”) Motion for Summary Judgment. On
February 4, 2014, Plaintiff pro se Melvin K. Chang, M.D., filed a Motion for
Reconsideration (“Motion”) and then filed an Amended Motion for
Reconsideration that same day (“Amended Motion”). Pursuant to Local Rule
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7.2(d), the Court finds these matters suitable for disposition without a hearing.
After careful consideration of the motions and supporting memorandum, and the
relevant legal authority, the Motion and Amended Motion are hereby DENIED.
BACKGROUND
The parties and the Court are familiar with the factual and procedural
background in this matter, and the Court does not recount it in full here.
Plaintiff’s Complaint alleged two causes of action: first, a claim that he was
terminated “in retaliation for his opposition to Straub’s discrimination of older
minority women who were employed by Straub” and second, a claim for
intentional infliction of emotional distress arising out of his alleged wrongful
termination. Complaint ¶¶ 23-24. The Court granted summary judgment to
Defendant on both counts in its January 7, 2014 Order.
In its Order, the Court concluded that Plaintiff failed to establish a
prima facie case of retaliation because he did not raise a triable issue of fact that he
engaged in protected activity. The Court also found that Plaintiff could not satisfy
the third prong of a prima facie case for retaliation—a causal link between his
alleged protected activity in 2006-2007 and his termination in 2011. Further, even
assuming a prima facie case of retaliation, the Court held that Defendant offered
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legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons for terminating Plaintiff, including his
unprofessional communications with Straub employees, Linda Cazinha and Ray
Vara, in violation of Straub’s code of conduct, and Plaintiff’s atypical employment
arrangement as a “call-in” physician working a half-day on every-other Saturday.
The Court concluded that Plaintiff failed to point to either direct or circumstantial
evidence of retaliatory motive, and failed to raise a genuine issue of fact as to
pretext.
As set forth below, Plaintiff seeks reconsideration of the Court’s
January 7, 2014 Order on multiple grounds, none of which justify the relief sought.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A party may move to alter or amend a judgment pursuant to Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e), consistent with the following Ninth Circuit
guidelines:
(1) if such motion is necessary to correct manifest errors of law
or fact upon which the judgment rests; (2) if such motion is
necessary to present newly discovered or previously
unavailable evidence; (3) if such motion is necessary to prevent
manifest injustice: or (4) if the amendment is justified by an
intervening change in controlling law.
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Herron, 634 F.3d 1101, 1111 (9th Cir. 2011). Demonstrating
one of the four reasons for reopening a judgment is a “high hurdle” that should not
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occur “absent highly unusual circumstances.” Weeks v. Bayer, 246 F.3d 1231,
1236 (9th Cir. 2001). Moreover, a Rule 59(e) motion may not present evidence or
raise legal arguments that were or could have been presented at the time of the
challenged decision. See Kona Enters., Inc. v. Estate of Bishop, 229 F.3d 877,
890 (9th Cir. 2000). Nonetheless, a “district court has considerable discretion
when considering a motion to amend a judgment under Rule 59(e).” Turner v.
Burlington N. Santa Fe R.R. Co., 338 F.3d 1058, 1063 (9th Cir. 2003).
DISCUSSION
Despite the multitude of issues raised by Plaintiff in his Motions, the
“highly unusual circumstances” necessary to achieve reconsideration are simply
not present. The Court declines to amend its Judgment in favor of Defendant for
any of the reasons cited by Plaintiff and particularly declines to alter its decision
based on arguments and evidence that are neither new nor persuasive. Plaintiff’s
arguments are addressed below.
I.
Characterization of Evidence
Plaintiff takes issue with Defendant’s characterization of his conduct
and citations to his own statements. For example, he asserts that Defendant
manipulated his “words and transcript punctuation,” by “misleadingly and
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dishonestly misquote[ing] from the transcription of the termination conference
(Pl.’s Ex. K) by using only part of [his] actual statement and a ‘period’ [.] rather
than an ‘ellipsis’ [. . .] and the end of Plaintiff’s interrupted statement as
documented in the transcript of the tape recording.” Motion at 3. Plaintiff asserts
that either the Court was duped by Defendant’s sleight of hand or failed to conduct
its own close review of the allegedly [mis-]cited passage.
First, the Court notes that it is Plaintiff’s own transcription of his own
surreptitious recording of his termination conference with Straub Chief Medical
Officer Yates with which Plaintiff quarrels -- Plaintiff alone is responsible for the
transcription’s content. See Plaintiff’s Exhibit K. Second, Plaintiff
acknowledges that the Court “properly cites [his] Response (Order: P 18, ¶ 2) with
the use of an ellipsis rather than the inaccurate and misleading period and includes
that last word ‘to’ which supports [his] assertion that he was cut off by Yates.”
Motion at 5. Third, it is Plaintiff, not Straub, who appears to be engaging in
transcript manipulation by seeking to add to the transcribed passage with bracketed
substantive comment on what he now claims he intended to say. Most
importantly, this entire line of argument is much ado about nothing, and the Court
will entertain it no further.
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Plaintiff also argues that Defendant misleadingly uses his “purely
financial” comment contained in his June 30, 2006 email to “lead the Court to
believe that he was referring to Straub’s motive for Topolinski’s employment
status change rather that his true goal of questioning Straub administration’s
unilateral decision to consolidate two managerial positions into only one and the
impact on two busy clinics.” Motion at 11. Plaintiff argues that the Court should
“instead conclude that [his] email statements regarding the financial and bottom
line in 2006, and included in his review in 2007, were never intended by him to be
reinterpreted by his former employer in 2011 to explain his sole concern in
advocating for two coworkers wrongfully treated by Straub.” Motion at 15.
Plaintiff’s assertion that the Court “may have inadvertently been influenced by
Straub’s deceitful editing” is absurd. Motion at 5. The Court has re-reviewed the
passages and related context cited by Plaintiff and fails to see any evidence of
deceit or manipulation on the part of Straub, much less evidence of how any such
clever editing satisfies Plaintiff’s Rule 59(e) burden.
To the extent Plaintiff takes issue with the Court’s characterization of
his attitude toward certain Straub employees as “intemperate” -- whereas there are
“no negative attitudinal descriptions of [Defendant’s] personnel in the Court’s
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Order” (Motion at 36) -- Plaintiff again presents no sufficient grounds for
reconsideration. The Court likewise rejects Plaintiff’s argument that “the Court
has been misled by Straub to label Chang’s attitude in a grossly unfavorable light
as ‘intemperate’, despite his disclosure [of] a personal psychological diagnosis that
might otherwise and well explain his actions.” Motion at 36. The basis of the
Court’s comment is a fair reading of the well-documented record, and the Court
sees no reason to modify it.
In short, none of Plaintiff’s arguments regarding the characterization
of the record or of his conduct demonstrate grounds for reconsideration. See, e.g.,
In re Wahlin, 2011 WL 10633196, at *2 (Bankr .D. Idaho Mar. 21, 2011) (quoting
In re Oak Park Calabasas Condo. Ass’n, 302 B.R. 682, 683 (Bankr. C.D. Cal.
2003)) (“A manifest error of law or fact must be one ‘that is plain and indisputable,
and that amounts to a complete disregard of the controlling law or the credible
evidence in the record.’”); In re Roemmele, 466 B.R. 706, 712 (Bankr. E.D. Pa.
2012) (“In order for a court to reconsider a decision due to manifest injustice, the
record presented must be so patently unfair and tainted that the error is manifestly
clear to all who view [it].”) (quotations and citations omitted).
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II.
“New” Arguments
Plaintiff attaches several new exhibits to his Motion that were not
previously offered during the summary judgment briefing. They include excerpts
of an EEOC Compliance Manual (Ex. B), portions of the National Labor Relations
Act (“NLRA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 157-158 (Ex. G), and a National Labor Relations
Board (“NLRB”) Report of the General Counsel (Ex. H).
There is no evidence or even contention that these exhibits were
previously unavailable, newly discovered, or represent an intervening change in
controlling law. Nor do these exhibits address the extensive deficiencies in
Plaintiff’s prima facie claim of retaliation or Straub’s legitimate reasons for
terminating him. Accordingly, the exhibits, and the arguments to which they
relate, are insufficient to alter or amend the Judgment under Rule 59(e).
III.
Remaining Arguments
The balance of Plaintiff’s arguments faults the Court for failing to
draw all reasonable inferences in his favor. For example, Plaintiff maintains that
“[i]n the most favorable light, the feedback document [] entitled ‘Welcome Home
Susie!’, should not be written off and trivialized as a ‘forty-one page, single space
document/memorandum.” Motion at 27. According to Plaintiff, “[i]n the most
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favorable light to the Plaintiff, Chang’s use of a questioning style to raise his
legitimate concerns using very specific words almost verbatim from Title VII and
ADEA, would be understood and not criticized.” Motion at 28. Additionally,
Plaintiff asserts that, viewed in the light most favorable to him, his “conversation
with Cazinha and their discussion about employment changes for [Kathy] Asato
would be considered acceptable. Chang was not charged with bullying or
harassment of Cazinha and he did not make inappropriate comments or take action
against her based on her race, sex, age or disability for instance.” Motion at
29-30.
The Court, however, is not required to adopt unreasonable inferences
from circumstantial evidence. McLaughlin v. Liu, 849 F.2d 1205, 1208 (9th Cir.
1988). More importantly, even if viewed in the manner urged by Plaintiff, this
evidence does nothing to establish a prima facie claim of retaliation, and therefore
offers no basis on which to grant reconsideration.
Plaintiff also faults the Court for failing to consider his “offer to
advocate for Asato” in August 2010 when the Court concluded that Plaintiff failed
to establish temporal proximity between his alleged protected activity and his
termination in 2011. See Motion at 22. According to Plaintiff, “[d]rawing all
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reasonable inferences in favor of the non-moving party, [his] offer to advocate for
Asato had temporal proximity to his termination.” Id. at 23.
Once again, Plaintiff fails to establish the significance of his evidence,
even were the Court to credit it. Plaintiff is certainly correct that something that
occurred in 2010 is closer in time to 2011 than something that occurred in 2007.
But “offering to advocate” on behalf of another employee is not evidence of
“protected activity” within the meaning of Title VII. And it is only the causal link
between “protected activity” and an adverse employment action that has any
significance for purposes of establishing a prima facie claim of retaliation.
CONCLUSION
Plaintiff plainly disagrees with and is disappointed by the Court’s
January 7, 2014 Order in favor of Defendant Straub. However, because Plaintiff
raises no new or previously unavailable evidence, no intervening change in the
law, no manifest error of law or fact, and no evidence of manifest injustice, there is
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no basis on which to grant reconsideration, and the Court hereby DENIES both
Plaintiff’s Motion and Amended Motion.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
DATED AT HONOLULU, HAWAI‘I, February 21, 2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Melvin K. Chang v. Straub Clinic & Hospital, et al; CV 12-617 DKW-RLP;
ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF’S MOTIONS FOR RECONSIDERATION OF
THE ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT STRAUB CLINIC AND HOSPITAL’S
MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
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