Chavda v. University System of the State of New Hampshire
Filing
22
///ORDER granting 10 Motion for Summary Judgment. Clerk shall enter judgment and close the case. So Ordered by District Judge Landya B. McCafferty.(gla)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Roslyn K. Chavda, Ph.D.
v.
Civil No. 13-cv-078-LM
Opinion No. 2014 DNH 162
University System of the
State of New Hampshire
O R D E R
In a case that has been removed from the Rockingham County
Superior Court, Roslyn Chavda, a former assistant professor at
the University of New Hampshire (“UNH”),1 has sued in four
counts, asserting claims captioned: (1) racial discrimination
(Count I); (2) gender discrimination (Count II); (3) status
retaliation (Count III); and (4) public policy (Count IV).
Counts I-III have been brought under both Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq., and New
Hampshire’s Law Against Discrimination, N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann.
(“RSA”) ch. 354-A.
The discrimination claims Chavda asserts in
Counts I and II are based upon allegations that she was
subjected to a hostile work environment and ultimately
discharged because of her race and gender.
Count IV is a claim
for wrongful discharge, under the common law of New Hampshire.
1
In this order, the court uses the acronym “UNH” to refer
both to the University of New Hampshire and to the defendant in
this case, the University System of the State of New Hampshire.
Before the court is defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
Plaintiff objects.
For the reasons that follow, defendant’s
motion for summary judgment is granted.
Summary Judgment Standard
“Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine
issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law.”
Ponte v. Steelcase Inc., 741 F.3d
310, 319 (1st Cir. 2014) (quoting Cortés–Rivera v. Dept. of
Corr., 626 F.3d 21, 26 (1st Cir. 2010)); see also Fed. R. Civ.
P. 56(a).
When ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the
court must “view[ ] the entire record ‘in the light most
hospitable to the party opposing summary judgment, indulging all
reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.’”
Winslow v.
Aroostook Cnty., 736 F.3d 23, 29 (1st Cir. 2013) (quoting Suarez
v. Pueblo Int’l, Inc., 229 F.3d 49, 53 (1st Cir. 2000)).
“The nonmovant may defeat a summary judgment motion by
demonstrating, through submissions of evidentiary quality, that
a trialworthy issue persists.”
Sánchez-Rodríguez v. AT&T
Mobility P.R., Inc., 673 F.3d 1, 9 (1st Cir. 2012) (quoting
Iverson v. City of Boston, 452 F.3d 94, 98 (1st Cir. 2006)).
Thus, “[c]onclusory allegations, improbable inferences, and
unsupported speculation, are insufficient to establish a genuine
2
dispute of fact.”
Travers v. Flight Servs. & Sys., Inc., 737
F.3d 144, 146 (1st Cir. 2013) (quoting Triangle Trading Co. v.
Robroy Indus., Inc., 200 F.3d 1, 2 (1st Cir. 1999)).
“Rather,
the party seeking to avoid summary judgment must be able to
point to specific, competent evidence to support his [or her]
claim.”
Sánchez-Rodríguez, 673 F.3d at 9 (quoting Soto-Ocasio
v. Fed. Ex. Corp., 150 F.3d 14, 18 (1st Cir. 1998)) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
Background
Roslyn Chavda is African American.
From the fall semester
of 2006 through the spring semester of 2012, she was employed by
UNH as an assistant professor in the political science
department (“department”).
Her primary teaching
responsibilities were in the department’s Master of Public
Administration (“MPA”) program, which was directed by Dr. Mel
Dubnick.
He, in turn, had been a member of Chavda’s
dissertation committee in graduate school and was instrumental
in bringing Chavda and her husband to UNH.
When Chavda was hired, UNH was in the midst of a hiring
freeze.
However, the department was able to get around the
freeze, and hire Chavda, because of her race and UNH’s ongoing
efforts to enhance racial diversity on campus.
The role of
Chavda’s race in her hiring was mentioned at the meeting where
3
the faculty voted to hire her.
When asked to explain what she
meant by calling her race a “reference point” for her colleagues
in the department, Chavda offered this clarification:
A.
I think it [race] was an issue for most of
Q.
Okay.
them.
Why do you think that?
A. I think – and again I have no evidence for
this. I think my race set me apart from them, not
from my perspective but from theirs. . . .
. . . .
A. I think it meant that they . . . gave me a
little bit less support because I wasn’t exactly like
them.
Q. Gave you a little less support.
[mean] . . .
What do you
A. At no point did they attempt . . . to . . .
help me with teaching, help me with publishing, take
me under their wing. I think they made me feel like
an other. Now, was that because I was a black woman?
Was that because I . . . was pregnant? Was that
because – I don’t know. I have no idea, but I mean
that’s what I think.
Def.’s Mem. of Law, Van Oot Aff., Ex. 1, Chavda Dep., Sept. 3,
2013 (doc. no. 10-16) 50:23–51:20.
Later in her deposition, she
reiterated the point: “I think the entire time that I’ve been at
UNH, I had no idea how race factored into any of this.
idea how gender factored into it.”
I had no
Id. at 208:11-14.
When Chavda arrived on campus, she was pregnant with twins.
Her pregnancy resulted in complications for both Chavda and her
4
babies, including premature delivery.
Those complications
forced Chavda out of the classroom for several weeks, and her
classes were covered by other faculty members, including her
husband.
In the spring of 2007, Chavda had a conversation with
Dubnick concerning her pregnancy that she describes in the
following way:
Q. . . . [Y]ou told him [department chair Dr.
Warren Brown] that you had just had a conversation
with Mel Dubnick –
A.
Uh-huh.
Q. – who told you that you had screwed
everything up by getting pregnant?
A.
Yep.
Q. And that everybody was pissed at you, and
they were sure that you had done it on purpose.
A.
Uh-huh.
Q.
Is that right?
A.
That’s correct.
Q. Okay. And then Mel told you that, quote,
they had plans that they were not going to be able to
fulfill because you were unable to do what you – what
had been planned for you?
A.
Uh-huh.
Q.
Is that right?
A.
Yes, that’s correct.
Chavda Dep. 90:11-91:5.
5
The terms of Chavda’s employment were governed by a
collective-bargaining agreement between the American Association
of University Professors and UNH.
Generally speaking, that
agreement provided that non-tenured faculty members such as
Chavda: (1) worked under renewable one-year appointments; and
(2) were evaluated annually by their departments to assess their
progress on the path toward tenure.
Chavda’s appointment was renewed four times, based upon:
(1) evaluations and recommendations from the department’s
promotion and tenure committee (“P&T Committee”); and (2)
separate recommendations from the department’s chair.
In April
of 2011, following the recommendations of both the P&T Committee
(by a 7-1 vote), and the department’s chair, UNH did not renew
Chavda’s appointment.
Instead, it offered her a one-year
terminal contract for the 2011-2012 academic year, thus removing
her from the tenure track.
The reasons given for that decision
were her uneven performance as a teacher and her failure to
publish a sufficient amount of peer-reviewed research.
Chavda
concedes that her publication record was considerably weaker
than those of two other junior faculty members in the
department, both women, who received tenure at about the same
time she was removed from the tenure track.
And, undisputed
evidence from student evaluations confirms that Chavda’s ratings
6
were consistently lower than those of other similarly situated
junior faculty members.2
In recognition of the difficulties
Chavda encountered during her first year at UNH, as a result of
her pregnancy, that year was not counted against her “tenure
clock,” which is the amount of time generally given to a junior
faculty member to compile a record of teaching, scholarship, and
service sufficient to merit an award of tenure.
Based upon the foregoing, Chavda sued in four counts,
asserting claims for race discrimination, gender discrimination,
retaliation, and wrongful discharge.
Discussion
In her surreply, Chavda concedes that UNH is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law on the retaliation claim she
asserted in Count III.
Accordingly, the following discussion is
limited to Chavda’s discrimination claims (Counts I and II) and
her claim for wrongful discharge (Count IV).
2
Specifically, Chavda’s average score on the question used
by the P&T Committee to evaluate teaching effectiveness was
3.98, while the two colleagues who were granted tenure had
scores of 4.55 and 4.65, and another colleague, who, like
Chavda, was recommended for removal from the tenure track, had
an average score of 4.53. See Doc. No. 18-19, at DEF 002735.
7
A. Discrimination
Chavda asserts claims for race discrimination (Count I) and
gender discrimination (Count II) under both Title VII and RSA
354-A.
“Because the New Hampshire Supreme Court relies on Title
VII cases to analyze claims under RSA 354-A, the court will
address [Chavda’s state and federal] claims together using the
Title VII standard.”
Hubbard v. Tyco Intg. Cable Sys., Inc.,
985 F. Supp. 2d 207, 218 (D.N.H. 2013) (quoting Hudson v. Dr.
Michael J. O’Connell’s Pain Care Ctr., Inc., 822 F. Supp. 2d 84,
92 (D.N.H. 2011)).
In Count I, Chavda states her race-discrimination claim
this way: “As a direct and proximate cause [sic] of her race,
Dr. Chavda was subjected to a hostile environment and,
ultimately, discharged.”
Compl. (doc. no. 1-1) ¶ 26.
She
states her gender-discrimination claim in a similar way.
That
is, Chavda claims that animus based upon her race and gender
“created an attitude of hostility that, from the very outset of
her employment, doomed her efforts to succeed.”
Law (doc. no. 12-1) 10.
Pl.’s Mem. of
In her objection to summary judgment,
she describes that hostility as consisting of: (1) heightened
scrutiny of her performance; and (2) assessments of her student
evaluations that, in her view, unfairly failed to take into
account the fact that the students she taught in the MPA program
8
were more likely than other students to complain about their
professors due to their own academic deficiencies.
The
principal forms of hostility she identifies in her deposition
are the failures of her senior colleagues to: (1) give her
advice on teaching; (2) invite her to write scholarly papers
with them; or (3) tell her about publication opportunities that
might be available to her.
Her theory is that because the
workplace hostility that precluded her from satisfying the
requirements for earning tenure was based upon her race and
gender, her removal from the tenure track was an act of race and
gender discrimination.
UNH is entitled to judgment as a matter
of law on Chavda’s discrimination claims.
1. Race Discrimination (Count I)
As Chavda concedes, this is not a case that involves any
acts of hostility that directly demonstrate race-based animus.
Rather, she argues that “[u]nlike a hostile environment where
racial epithets were hurled, or she was directly impugned due to
her childbirth, the academics exercised their bias in the
confines of the P&T Committee.”
1) 10.
Pl.’s Mem. of Law (doc. no. 12-
She elaborates: “[U]nlike the typical situation where
those creating the hostile atmosphere at least have the courage
to do so directly, these academics chose the cloistered
9
deliberations of the P&T Committee to hurl their venom, then
couch[ed] their ‘conclusions’ in the antiseptic verbiage of the
annual reviews, largely leaving Chavda to guess why her efforts
to improve were fruitless.”
Id. at 12-13.
That argument fails
for several reasons.
First, Chavda has provided no legal support for her theory
that a person can be harassed, for purposes of a hostile-workenvironment claim, by words or deeds of which she is entirely
unaware.
And, as a practical matter, it would appear all but
impossible for Chavda to establish that race- or gender-based
conduct by the P&T Committee that was hidden from her “was both
objectively and subjectively offensive, such that a reasonable
person would find it hostile or abusive and [that she] in fact
did perceive it to be so,” Ponte, 741 F.3d at 320 (quoting
Forrest v. Brinker Int’l Payroll Co., 511 F.3d 225, 228 (1st
Cir. 2007)), which is one of the elements of a hostile-workenvironment claim.
Second, Chavda has produced no evidence of any racial
animus on the part of any of her colleagues in the political
science department.
She has produced evidence that her
colleagues knew that the only reason the department was able to
hire her was her race.
But, she has not produced any evidence
that any member of the department was displeased by the
10
circumstances of Chavda’s hiring or harbored any animosity
toward African Americans specifically or people of color
generally.
Although she refers to “venom” hurled by her
colleagues, the only venom of which she provides any evidence
consists of comments about her deficiencies in teaching,
scholarship, and interactions with colleagues in the department.
And, while she has produced evidence that several of her
colleagues harbored serious doubts about her competence long
before she was removed from the tenure track, none of those
internal P&T Committee communications give any indication that
her colleagues harbored racial animus.
Rather, they tend to
mirror the “antiseptic verbiage of the annual reviews,” Pl.’s
Mem. of Law (doc. no 12-2) 13, that Chavda characterizes as
camouflage for racial animus.
Finally, no reasonable jury could be persuaded by Chavda’s
disparate-treatment argument based upon the manner in which the
P&T Committee treated her, as contrasted with the way it treated
three white colleagues who were in approximately the same
position on the tenure track.
Of those three, the two who were
granted tenure had: (1) publication records that were “head and
shoulders better than [Chavda’s],” Chavda Dep. 222:5-6; and (2)
student evaluations that were substantially better than
Chavda’s, see Doc. No. 18-19, at DEF 002735-36.
11
Chavda’ third purported comparator, Andrew Smith, was not
granted tenure, which would appear to diminish his value as a
comparator in a disparate-treatment argument where the adverse
employment action was UNH’s decision to remove Chavda from the
tenure track.
Chavda, however, identifies three differences in
the way she was treated vis-à-vis Smith.
First, she argues that while the P&T Committee recommended
that both she and Smith be removed from the tenure track, the
committee subjected her performance to more scrutiny than
Smith’s.
Because both Chavda and Smith had similarly thin
records of scholarly research, and Smith, in fact, had stronger
student evaluations, Chavda’s differential-scrutiny argument
goes nowhere.
She also argues that Smith was given extra time
at the end of his tenure clock, presumably to improve his record
of scholarship.
But, it is undisputed that she herself was
given an extra year at the start of her tenure clock, so as not
to penalize her for her difficult first year.
Finally, Chavda notes that after Smith left the tenure
track, he continued to be employed by the political science
department as a part-time, non-tenure-track, affiliated
associate professor, and she was not.
But, as to that bit of
disparate treatment, Chavda and Smith were not similarly
situated.
Before and during his stint as a tenure-track
12
assistant professor (which was also part-time), Smith was the
director of the UNH Survey Center, and he continued in that
position after he left the tenure track.
Given that fact,
Chavda and Smith were not situated similarly enough to turn
Smith’s appointment as an affiliated professor into evidence of
racial bias against Chavda.
See Garcia v. Bristol-Myers Squibb
Co., 535 F.3d 23, 31 (1st Cir. 2008) (“To successfully allege
disparate treatment, a plaintiff must show ‘that others
similarly situated to [her] in all relevant respects were
treated differently by the employer.’”) (quoting Koseris v.
Rhode Island, 331 F.3d 207, 214 (1st Cir. 2003)).
The bottom line is this.
UNH is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law on the race-discrimination claim Chavda asserts in
Count I.
2. Gender Discrimination (Count II)
Count II stands on much the same footing as Count I.
The
only real difference is the conversation in which MPA director
Mel Dubnick expressed his opinion that Chavda had “screwed
everything up by getting pregnant.”
That comment is
insufficient, by a wide margin, to establish that Chavda’s
removal from the tenure track was a result of gender
discrimination.
It was a single comment, made by a non-
13
decisionmaker,3 more than four years before the employment action
on which Chavda bases her gender-discrimination claim.
Moreover, while Chavda characterizes Dubnick’s comment as
expressing gender-based animus that took root at the very outset
of her employment and animated every evaluation of her
performance, that theory does not account for the fact that on
three separate occasions, prior to its 2011 recommendation
against renewing Chavda’s appointment, the P&T Committee voted
to recommend renewing Chavda’s appointment and keeping her on
the tenure track.
In sum, Chavda has failed to produce evidence from which a
reasonable jury could conclude that her removal from the tenure
track resulted from gender-based animus.
Accordingly, UNH is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the genderdiscrimination claim Chavda asserts in Count II.
B. Wrongful Discharge (Count IV)
Count IV is Chavda’s claim for wrongful discharge.
The New
Hampshire Supreme Court has recently described that cause of
action:
3
To clarify, Dubnick did have one vote on the eight-member
P&T Committee, but the Committee’s recommendation was the first
step in a process that involved multiple evaluations and
recommendations before any actual decision was made.
14
The prevailing rule in New Hampshire is that,
absent an agreement to the contrary, employment
contracts are “at-will,” meaning that “both parties
are free at any time to terminate the employment
relationship, with or without cause.” Porter v. City
of Manchester, 151 N.H. 30, 37 (2004) (quotation and
brackets omitted). An exception to the “at-will” rule
is that even at-will employees may pursue a cause of
action in tort for wrongful discharge. See id. at 37–
39. In order to succeed on a wrongful discharge
claim, a plaintiff must establish two elements: (1)
that the discharge was “motivated by bad faith,
retaliation or malice”; and (2) that the plaintiff was
discharged “for performing an act that public policy
would encourage or for refusing to do something that
public policy would condemn.” Karch v. BayBank FSB,
147 N.H. 525, 536 (2002). “Although ordinarily the
issue of whether a public policy exists is a question
for the jury, at times the presence or absence of such
a public policy is so clear that a court may rule on
its existence as a matter of law, and take the
question away from the jury.” Short v. School Admin.
Unit 16, 136 N.H. 76, 84 (1992) (citation omitted).
Leeds v. BAE Sys., 165 N.H. 376, 379 (2013).
The court begins by noting that in this case, Chavda had
accepted an appointment that specified the duration of her
employment, which calls into question her status as an at-will
employee.
Thus, it is not at all clear that a cause of action
for wrongful discharge is even available to Chavda.
Cf. Dillman
v. N.H. Coll., 150 N.H. 431, 434-35 (2003) (holding that
reasonable jury could conclude that letter of appointment issued
by academic institution, that included a duration provision, was
an employment contract sufficient to support an action for
breach of contract when employee was discharged prior to
15
expiration of the term specified in the appointment).
But,
because UNH does not raise this issue and, in fact, presumes
that Chavda was an employee at will, the court will make the
same presumption.
Count IV falters on the second element.
In her complaint,
Chavda asserts that her “termination by UNH was a direct and
proximate result of her attempts to enforce academic standards
and thereby improve UNH’s MPA program, a policy encouraged by
the State of New Hampshire.”
Compl. (doc. no. 1-1) ¶ 32.
In an
interrogatory answer, Chavda had this to say about the sources
of the public policies underlying the second element of her
wrongful-discharge claim:
Public policy discourages penalizing performance based
on dramatically disparate standards of evaluation.
Public policy encourages procreation and I suffered
loss of standing and stature as a result of my . . .
giving birth, which standing and [stature] could not
be repaired, ultimately resulting in my discharge[.]
Def.’s Mem. of Law, Van Oot Aff., Ex. 1, Chavda Dep., Ex. 4
(doc. no. 10-16), at 22.
In response to UNH’s argument that
“[t]he status . . . of being a female employee who has given
birth to a child, while protected by public policy (including
Title VII and RSA 354-A), is not an act by an employee that will
satisfy the ‘public policy’ prong of a wrongful termination
16
claim,” Def.’s Mem. of Law (doc. no. 10-1) 26, Chavda makes the
following argument:
Setting aside whether or not pregnancy is akin to
sickness, disability and age, that is simply not
Chavda’s claim. Rather, it was the act of giving
birth, and the perceptions that she was not performing
that flowed from that act, upon which she relies. The
informality of the arrangements for class coverage,
and her efforts to balance work, birth and premature
twins because she was never told of the availability
for maternity leave, . . . magnified the negative
perception of this individual who was already faced
with the Departmental knowledge that, but for her
race, she would not have been hired.
Pl.’s Mem. of Law (doc. no. 12-1) 15;4 see also Pl.’s Surreply
(doc. no. 21) 6 (explaining that Chavda “claims that, as a
result of having given birth, she was perceived as failing to
adequately perform her job, which worked to her considerable
detriment and colored the perception of her performance
throughout her employment”).
There are several problems with Chavda’s argument.
First,
despite having been asked to identify the sources of the public
policies underlying her claim, Chavda asserts that procreation
4
Based upon Chavda’s briefing, it is difficult to tell
whether she has abandoned her reliance upon a public policy that
“discourages penalizing performance based on dramatically
disparate standards of evaluation.” Because the public-policy
analysis applicable to a wrongful-discharge claim focusses on
public-policy support for the actions or inactions of the
plaintiff/employee, see Antonis v. Elecs. for Imaging, Inc., No.
07-cv-163-JL, 2008 WL 5083979, at *3 (D.N.H. Nov. 25, 2008),
whether public policy would support the manner in which UNH
evaluated Chavda is irrelevant to her claim.
17
is an act encouraged by public policy, but offers no legal or
other support for that assertion.
Even assuming that
procreation is an act supported by public policy, Chavda cannot
demonstrate that she was discharged for giving birth to her twin
children.
On a purely temporal basis, no reasonable jury could
conclude that UNH removed her from the tenure track, in 2011,
because she gave birth in 2006.
She was removed from the tenure
track, by all accounts, for her shortcomings in teaching and
scholarship.
Moreover, Chavda does not even argue that those
shortcomings resulted from her having given birth.
Rather, she
adds another link to the chain of causation, arguing that the
academic record that served as the basis for her removal from
the tenure track resulted, in one way or another, from negative
perceptions of her among her colleagues which, in turn, resulted
from her having given birth.
That chain is far too long and far
too weak to support a claim for wrongful discharge that a
reasonable jury could resolve in Chavda’s favor.
Because Chavda cannot demonstrate that she was discharged
for giving birth, UNH is entitled to judgment as a matter of law
on the wrongful-discharge claim she asserts in Count IV.
18
Conclusion
For the reasons detailed above, UNH is entitled to judgment
as a matter of law on all three of Chavda’s claims.
Thus, its
motion for summary judgment, document no. 10, is granted.
The
clerk of the court shall enter judgment in accordance with this
order and close the case.
SO ORDERED.
__________________________
Landya McCafferty
United States District Judge
July 29, 2014
cc:
Lawrence B. Gormley, Esq.
Marth Van Oot, Esq.
19
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?