Kertanis v. Georgia-Pacific Gypsum LLC
Filing
32
///MEMORANDUM ORDER granting 27 Motion for Summary Judgment. The clerk shall enter judgment accordingly and close the case. So Ordered by Chief Judge Joseph N. Laplante.(jb)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Joseph Kertanis
v.
Civil No. 14-cv-343-JL
Opinion No. 2016 DNH 082
Georgia-Pacific Gypsum, LLC
MEMORANDUM ORDER
In this state-law employment action, the court is asked to
decide at the summary judgment stage, as it often is in cases of
this type,1 why the defendant fired the plaintiff.
In a number
of cases, the summary judgment record is not sufficiently
conclusive to permit that decision.
In this case, however, it
is.
Joseph Kertanis claims that defendant Georgia-Pacific
Gypsum, LLC (GP) fired him from GP’s Newington, New Hampshire,
plant because he
was critical of the plant's human resources
manager and after he responded to what he perceived to be a coworker’s dangerous work habits.
GP claims it fired Kertanis for
verbally abusing and harassing the co-worker.
This court has
diversity jurisdiction over this action between Kertanis, a New
Hampshire citizen, and the defendant, an out-of-state
corporation.
1
See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1).
See, e.g., Taylor v. eCoast Sales Sol., 35 F. Supp. 3d
195, 196 (D.N.H. 2014).
Before the court is GP’s motion for summary judgment, in
which it argues that the undisputed record lacks any evidence of
either the bad faith or the public policy rationale necessary to
support Kertanis’s claims.
After oral argument and review of the
parties’ submissions, the court finds that the undisputed facts
show that GP fired Kertanis because he verbally abused the coworker, an action that public policy does not condone.
GP’s
motion is therefore granted.
I.
Applicable legal standard
Summary judgment is appropriate where “the movant shows that
there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
P. 56(a).
Fed. R. Civ.
A dispute is “genuine” if it could reasonably be
resolved in either party’s favor at trial.
See Estrada v. Rhode
Island, 594 F.3d 56, 62 (1st Cir. 2010) (citing Meuser v. Fed.
Express Corp., 564 F.3d 507, 515 (1st Cir. 2009)).
A fact is
“material” if it could sway the outcome under applicable law.
Id. (citing Vineberg v. Bissonnette, 548 F.3d 50, 56 (1st Cir.
2008)).
In analyzing a summary judgment motion, the court “views all
facts and draws all reasonable inferences in the light most
favorable to the non-moving party.”
Id.
The court will not
credit conclusory allegations or speculation.
2
See Meuser, 564
F.3d at 515; Sea Shore Corp. v. Sullivan, 158 F.3d 51, 54 (1st
Cir. 1998).
With this standard in place, the court turns to the
facts of the case, highlighting only those necessary to the
resolution of the instant motion.
II.
Background facts
Kertanis started working there at GP’s Newington plant in
September 1998.
The plant produces wall board and drywall by
processing raw gypsum ore.
Kertanis filled a variety of roles at
the plant during his time there.2
At the time of his
termination, Kertanis was working an overnight (11:00 PM to 7:30
AM) shift.
Production employees such as Kertanis at the Newington plant
work on self-directed teams without direct supervisors.
Each
team is responsible for assigning work to its members, ensuring
quality standards and managing all other aspects of the team’s
performance.
Some team members act as “coordinators” responsible
for certain administrative functions, including human resources,
safety, environmental, quality, and business.
The Newington
plant also has a Resource Team which consists of management-level
2
According to GP, Kertanis committed several disciplinary
and safety infractions between 2002 and 2011, including use of a
racial epithet in reference to Martin Luther King, Jr., Day and
responding to a co-employee’s question by saying “you can't
f*cking read.” GP does not claim that these past incidents
played a role in Kertanis’s termination.
3
employees overseeing production and other aspects of the
business.
Finally, the Newington Plant has a Plant Management
Team (“PMT”) that typically consists of the Plant Manager, the
Human Resources Manager, and other management personnel.
Each
production team is responsible for addressing employee discipline
issues.
When an employee discipline issue arises, the employee’s
team meets to discuss the issue.
The team then decides on the
disciplinary action to be taken.
Most discipline, including
verbal or written warnings, can be issued by the team.
If the
team believes an employee should be terminated, the team’s
recommendation is forwarded to the PMT for consideration.
The
PMT can affirm, reject, or modify the team’s recommendation.
At
the time relevant to this litigation, Kertanis was working on
Team 3.
GP Hired Nick Philbrook as a machine operator in October
2010.
Philbrook was soon working on Team 3 with Kertanis, Team 3
human resources coordinator Jim Michalski, and the team's
production coordinator, Shane Stevens.
for training Philbrook.
The trio was responsible
Initially, Philbrook performed well.
According to Kertanis, however, Philbrook’s performance began
faltering in January 2011, when he began working the overnight
shift.
After discussion with Philbrook, Kertanis determined that
Philbrook was having sleep issues that interfered with his work.
4
On January 4, 2011, Philbrook was disciplined.
Eventually,
Philbrook's training on all equipment other than the forklift was
suspended.
As a result, Team 3 workers were questioning whether
Philbrook would have to be transferred to a different area within
GP.
Meanwhile, in March 2011, Kertanis got into a dispute with
the plant’s human resources manager, Sandra Heald, over unrelated
issues that involved neither Philbrook nor safety concerns:
the
firing of a manager and the later re-hiring of an employee whom
Kertanis believed was ineligible for re-hire.
When Kertanis
raised these issues with Heald, she told him that he “should look
for work elsewhere” if he didn’t approve of or didn’t think he
could work with the re-hired employee.
He took this as a threat
to his job.
On May 10, 2011, Kertanis was criticized about Team 3’s
failure to report an environmental issue, something that fell
within Kertanis’s bailiwick, but about which he had no
information.
Philbrick later told Kertanis that he had reported
the incident to someone else, who told him to manipulate a
recording device so that the machine in question appeared to be
operating normally.
Believing Philbrook’s actions to be improper
Kertanis felt it was necessary to stress the importance of the
correct procedures.
After receiving unsatisfactory responses
5
from Philbrook and perceiving that Philbrook was still suffering
from sleep deprivation issues, Kertanis, consistent with company
procedures, undertook a “counseling” session with Philbrook in an
effort to stress the need to perform better at his job.
so the next day.
He did
Kertanis states that he “discussed,”
“explained,” “begged,” and “communicated” with Philbrook but
believed that Philbrook was not listening to him.
Kertanis told
him that he would have to turn the matter of Philbrook’s
performance over to the entire team for consideration.
On the same day, Philbrook informed Michalski that Kertanis
had long been yelling and swearing at him and belittling him, and
that he no longer wanted to work at GP due to Kertanis.
For his
part, Kertanis admits to yelling at, and probably swearing at,
Philbrook in the final counseling session.3
After a team meeting
on May 12, Michalski and Stevens told Kertanis that Philbrook was
going to quit as a result of Kertanis’s treatment, that Kertanis
should “lighten up” on him, and that he should apologize tp
Philbrook.
Kertanis did so.
In a declaration submitted by GP,
Philbrook stated that Kertanis has been verbally abusive towards
him in the past, and that he did not believe Kertanis’s behavior
would change.
3
Philbrook’s declaration does not mention this
confrontation, but instead focuses mostly on Kertanis’s treatment
of him generally.
6
On May 13, 2011, Heald was informed that Philbrook was
unhappy over the treatment he received from Kertanis.
Unable to
locate Michalski or Stevens, Heald spoke directly to Philbrook
who admitted to being upset.
He told Heald that working with
Kertanis was “unbearable” and that he yelled and swore at
Philbrook regularly, including on one occasion earlier that same
week when Philbrook was performing a new task, and when he looked
to Kertanis for guidance (“like a deer in the headlights,”
according to Kertanis), Kertanis asked, “what the f*ck are you
looking at me for[?]” and then soon after, “what the f*ck are you
doing[?] [L]ook at me.
You don't know what the hell you're
doing.”4
Philbrook told Heald that he had spoken to Michalski about
Kertanis’s treatment and that he was aware that Michalski and
Stevens had spoken to Kertanis about it.
Despite the apology,
Philbrook explained to Heald he did not believe that Kertanis’s
post-apology behavior would change.
Following her conversation
with Philbrook, Heald spoke with Michalski about the situation
between Kertanis and Philbrook.
Michalski told her that he and
Stevens spoke to Kertanis about the way he was treating
Philbrook.
Michalski also informed Heald that Philbrook told him
4
This was the only specific instance Philbrook recounted in
his declaration.
7
that he did not want to come into work because of the way
Kertanis had been treating him and that he was concerned that
Philbrook was going to quit.
Michalski told Heald that
Kertanis’s behavior had been going on “forever” and that he
recalled Kertanis treating him that way, and that Kertanis had
also treated Stevens badly.
Michalski said that the issue wasn’t
brought to the attention of the whole team because he and Stevens
thought that it would only make the situation worse.
Heald was sharply critical of their “apology only” approach.
She asked Michalski if he believed the plaintiff should be
allowed to treat people the way Philbrook described, and
Michalski said, “No.”
She also told Michalski that she believed
that Kertanis’s conduct required more action by the team.
At
Heald’s suggestion Michalski called her on Sunday, May 15, before
the team reported to work for the week.
Michalski said he would
talk to Stevens and report back.
Later that night Stevens called Heald to discuss the
situation.
team.
He apologized to the organization on behalf of the
Stevens stated that he spoke with Michalski and initially
believed that they handled the situation appropriately, but that
upon reflection, he had come to the opposite conclusion and
apologized to the organization.
Stevens told Heald that the
plaintiff’s conduct was not appropriate and should not be allowed
8
to continue because he believed Kertanis’s conduct violated GP’s
Code of Conduct and Guiding Principles.
Stevens also told Heald
that every major issue with which the team dealt was related to
Kertanis, and that after a “talking to,” Kertanis’s behavior
would improve but he would eventually slip back into his old
ways.
He conceded that this issue should have been brought to
management earlier and agreed that they would handle this as a
team on Sunday night.
Stevens told Heald that they would send
the plaintiff home and would inform him that he is to come in
Monday morning to meet with the PMT.
Stevens stated that the
Team would address Kertanis’s conduct and that Michalski would
speak with Heald on Monday morning and present the Team’s
recommendation for the PMT’s consideration.
belief that Kertanis should be terminated.
He expressed his
Heald did not
explicitly tell Michalski or Stevens that she believed Kertanis
should be terminated.
Michalski called Kertanis at home and told him that he was
going to be suspended on Sunday, May 15, 2011, and that there
would be a meeting with the PMT on Monday.5
Kertanis testified
that while Michalski did not tell him why, he assumed it had to
do with the incident with Philbrook.
5
It was the practice at the Newington plant to suspend
employees involved in a significant disciplinary situation
pending a resolution.
9
Team 3 met on May 15 to discuss Kertanis’s conduct towards
Philbrook.
After determining that he violated GP’s Guiding
Principles of respect, integrity and compliance, Team 3 voted to
recommend Kertanis’s termination.6
Prior to the PMT meeting on Monday, May 16, 2011, Heald
spoke with her supervisor, Robert Wolfe, Senior Human Resources
Director, about Philbrook’s allegations and the possibility of
terminating the plaintiff’s employment.
Heald needed approval
from Wolfe (and the PMT) prior to terminating any employee.
Given Philbrook’s allegations, Wolfe agreed that Kertanis’s
conduct was grounds for termination.
The PMT, consisting of
Heald and two other plant managers, met on May 16, 2011, to
consider Team 3's recommendation.
attended the meeting.
Michalski and Kertanis also
Kertanis asked the PMT to reconsider the
decision to terminate him.
The PMT determined that the plaintiff had violated various
GP Guiding Principles.
Accordingly, the PMT upheld Team 3’s
6
Michalski summarized the team’s decision in a memorandum
to the PMT, stating, “Team 3 met regarding the recent issues with
Joe Kertanis. We learned last week that Joe was harassing one of
our new employee’s [sic]. He had done this on numerous
occasions. Joe was not following our guiding principles.
Respect/Integrity/Compliance. Team 3 decided that as a senior
member of Team 3 Joe is well aware of his expectations as a
Newington employee. He has demonstrated non-compliance, we as a
team can not tolerate. We have voted to recommend termination at
this time. Team 3.”
10
decision and terminated Kertanis’s employment, effective May 16,
2011.
Kertanis signed an Exit Form that listed his “Reason for
Leaving” GP as “Termination due to violation of Code of Conduct &
Guiding Principles.”
III.
1.
Legal Analysis
Wrongful termination
In order to prevail on a wrongful termination claim under
New Hampshire law, “a plaintiff must establish two elements:
one, that the employer terminated the employment out of bad
faith, malice, or retaliation; and two, that . . . the employment
[was terminated] because the employee performed acts which public
policy would encourage or . . . refused to perform acts which
public policy would condemn.”
Short v. School Admin. Unit No.
16, 136 N.H. 76, 84 (1992) (citing Cloutier v. A & P Tea Co.,
Inc., 121 N.H. 915, 921–22 (1981)).
“[O]rdinarily the issue of
whether a public policy exists is a question for the jury, [but]
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.”
Id.
Bad faith or malice on the part of an employer requires
evidence that (1) an employee is discharged for pursuing policies
condoned by the employer, (2) the record does not support the
stated reason for the discharge, or (3) disparate treatment was
11
administered to a similarly situated employee.
See Cloutier, 121
N.H. at 921–22.
Kertanis argues that Heald’s role in his termination was
motivated by malice and retaliation in response to his earlier
criticism of Heald regarding the resignation of a plant manager
and the re-hiring of a co-worker.
As explained below, however,
even assuming that the record evidence creates a genuine issue as
to whether Heald acted with bad faith or malice,7 Kertanis’s
claim fails on the “public policy” element.
The court begins by noting that Kertanis’s claims are not a
model of clarity.
The operative complaint, filed pro se, is
unclear as to the public policy rationale undergirding the
lawsuit.
Later represented by counsel, Kertanis’s objection to
summary judgment and oral argument helped bring the issue into
focus, although the precise contours of his claim remained
somewhat of a moving target.
Assessing the totality of his filings and oral argument,
Kertanis suggests two public policy rationales in support of his
wrongful termination claim.
First, that GP’s unusual management
7
Specifically, the court assumes that a rational jury could
find that Heald became involved in Kertanis’s termination as
retaliation for his questioning her decision-making in regard to
the fired and re-hired employees. Moreover, such questioning by
Kertanis could be seen as consistent with GP’s team-basedmanagement, i.e., he was pursuing a policy condoned by GP.
Cloutier, 121 N.H. at 921-22.
12
structure – a “self-regulated workplace” where employees also
serve as managers – fosters a public policy that would encourage
him to speak out to Heald as he did.
Second, that his
interactions with Philbrook were to ensure plant safety, a goal
that public policy would encourage.
The court addresses these in
turn.
Kertanis claims that “[i]t is against public policy to
require employee/member participation in the management process
yet subject them to termination for doing a required act.”
no. 28-1 at 17).
(Doc.
However, he has cited no authority (nor
provided any at oral argument) that recognizes such a public
policy, or even, more generally, a public policy favoring any
sort of management structure or an employee's involvement in it.
See Short, 136 N.H. at 85 (holding that “an employee's expression
of disagreement with a management decision is not an act
protected by public policy”).8
That Kertanis may have been
following a policy GP condoned has no bearing on the public
policy analysis.
Company policy and public policy are neither
factually nor conceptually identical.
8
“[T]he first prong [of the
To the extent that Kertanis is arguing that GP's alleged
non-compliance with an employee handbook can support a cause of
action, he is mistaken. See Gavin v. Liberty Mut. Group, Inc.,
2012 DNH 154, 20 (holding that allegations of employer’s failure
to follow internal policies does not implicate a “public policy”
within the context of a wrongful termination action), citing
MacKenzie v. Linehan, 158 N.H. 476, 481 (2009).
13
wrongful termination burden of proof] focuses on the nature of
the employer’s actions,” Duhy v. Concord Gen. Mut. Ins. Co., 2009
DNH 074, 27 (citations and punctuation omitted), while the second
prong “focus[es] on the acts of the employee and their
relationship to public policy, not on the mere articulation of a
public policy by the employee.”
Frechette v. Wal-Mart Stores,
Inc., 925 F. Supp. 95, 98 (D.N.H. 1995).
Next, to the extent that Kertanis argues that he was
terminated for trying to address safety concerns with Philbrook,
there is no record evidence from which a reasonable jury could
conclude that his safety advocacy played any role in GP’s
decision.
Even if the summary judgment record permits the
inference that Kertanis’s indisputably rough verbal treatment of
Philbrook was motivated by his interest in plant safety, he
concedes that his final (and ultimately termination-triggering)
discussion with Philbrook was unrelated to safety.
He also does
not dispute either that the specific instances related above
actually happened or that his treatment, in general, could be
seen as “overbearing” and “overzealous” and, at least on the
final occasion, required an apology.9
9
Kertanis disputes the characterization of his treatment as
“bullying” or “harassing,” but not that the verbal confrontations
occurred. To the extent he argues that GP should have weighed
his conduct differently, the court borrows from federal antidiscrimination law to point out that it is not “a super-personnel
14
All of plaintiff’s putative public policy theories also
suffer from a similar flaw.
New Hampshire law suggests that no
public policy supports mistreating a co-worker, even in the
pursuit of a an appropriate concern.
In Leeds v. BAE Systems,
165 N.H. 376 (2013), the plaintiff was discharged for using
“abusive or threatening language” following a traffic
confrontation in which he mistook the other driver's cellphone
for a gun.
Id. at 377.
After the trial court granted summary
judgment in the defense’s favor, Leeds argued that a jury should
have been allowed to determine whether public policy supported
action he described as “self-defense”.
In rejecting the
argument, the Court said:
Whether the other driver was the primary
aggressor and whether Leeds mistook the cell
phone for a gun, are immaterial
considerations. Even assuming, without
deciding, that Leeds’s contact with the cell
phone was an act of self-defense in response
to unprovoked aggression, the remainder of
his conduct on company property was not
self-defense. We therefore hold, as a matter
of law, that public policy neither encourages
Leeds’s actions nor favors them over BAE’s
policy prohibiting abusive language and
behavior in the workplace. See Short, 136
department that reexamines an entity’s business decisions."
Espinal v. Nat'l Grid NE Holdings 2, LLC, 693 F.3d 31, 35 (1st
Cir. 2012) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Feliciano
de la Cruz v. El Conquistador Resort & Country Club, 218 F.3d 1,
7 (1st Cir.2000) (“[T]he question is not whether [plaintiff] was
actually performing below expectations, but whether [his
employer] believed that []he was.”)
15
N.H. at 84–85, 612 A.2d 364 (holding, as a
matter of law, that loyalty to one’s
supervisor “does not form the basis of a
public policy because a countervailing public
policy supports the [employer's] exercise of
its employment and management
responsibilities”).
Id. at 380 (emphasis added).
In other words, although there can
be no question that public policy would encourage employees from
protecting themselves from workplace violence (indeed, criminal
laws codify self-defense), that same public policy does not
countenance doing so in an abusive way and does not negate an
employer’s right to maintain workplace standards of behavior and
terminate employees who violate them.10
So it is here.
As in Leeds, the court finds that no public
policy supporting workplace safety or participation in a “selfmanaged workplace” requires an employer to condone the purported
furtherance of such a policy through abusive disrespectful
conduct toward co-workers.
Accordingly, GP is entitled to
summary judgment on Kertanis’s wrongful termination claim.
10
Kertanis’s summary judgment objection also contains a
sentence or two concerning the public policy of permitting more
senior employees to “teach and train new employees.” However,
even if such a public policy exists, a proposition that Kertanis
has not substantiated through briefing or argument, Kertanis’s
memorandum of law concedes that the process of teaching “should
not be interfered with absent abuse or harm.” (Doc. no. 28-1 at
18). Here, Kertanis’s verbal abuse of Philbrook is uncontested,
and thus this public policy argument is unavailing.
16
2.
Good faith and fair dealing
The court’s ruling on Kertanis’s wrongful termination claim
is fatal to his claim that GP violated the implied covenant of
good faith and fair dealing by firing him.
The same lack of a
public policy anchor that undermined the former dooms this one as
well.
As the New Hampshire Supreme Court noted in Centronics v.
Genicom, Inc., “an employer violates an implied term of a
contract for employment at-will by firing an employee out of
malice or bad faith in retaliation for action taken or refused by
the employee in consonance with public policy.”
132 N.H. 133,
140 (1989).
IV.
Conclusion
The undisputed summary judgment record lacks any evidence
that Kertanis was terminated for performing an act that public
policy would encourage or for refusing to perform an act that
would run contrary to public policy.
judgment11 is therefore GRANTED.
The clerk shall enter judgment
accordingly and close the case.
11
GP’s motion for summary
Doc. no. 27.
17
SO ORDERED.
Joseph N. Laplane
United States District Judge
Dated: April 19, 2016
cc:
Elizabeth B. Olcott, Esq.
Daniel B. Klein, Esq.
Jean M. Wilson, Esq.
Brian L. Michaelis, Esq.
18
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