Campbell v. East Tennessee State University et al
Filing
66
MEMORANDUM OPINION. Campbell's motion to alter or amend 55 is DENIED. AN APPROPRIATE JUDGMENT WILL ENTER. Signed by District Judge Travis R McDonough on 12/3/2020. (AWS)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE
AT GREENEVILLE
KATHY CAMPBELL,
Plaintiff,
v.
EAST TENNESSEE STATE
UNIVERSITY, et al.,
Defendants.
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Case No. 2:18-cv-41
Judge Travis R. McDonough
Magistrate Judge Cynthia R. Wyrick
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before the Court is Plaintiff Kathy Campbell’s motion to alter or amend the Court’s order
granting Defendant Bright Services’ (“Bright”) motion for summary judgment. (Doc. 55.) For
the following reasons, Campbell’s motion will be DENIED.
I.
BACKGROUND
On March 18, 2020, the Court entered a memorandum opinion granting Bright’s motion
for summary judgment on Campbell’s claims for unlawful retaliation under Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”) and the Tennessee Human Rights Act (“THRA”). (See
generally Doc. 52.) In granting Bright’s summary-judgment motion, the Court found that
Campbell failed to satisfy her burden at the prima facie stage to proffer evidence of a causal
connection between her protected activity and the alleged adverse employment action. (Id. at
10‒14.) Specifically, the Court found that Campbell failed to produce any evidence suggesting
that Bright treated other employees who had not engaged in protected activity more favorably in
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making its placement decisions.1 (Id.)
On April 14, 2020, Campbell filed a motion for the Court to alter or amend its order
granting Bright’s motion for summary judgment pursuant to Rule 59 of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure. (Doc. 55.) On April 28, 2020, Bright responded in opposition to Campbell’s
motion. (Doc. 57.) As part of its response, Bright submitted an additional declaration from
Theresa Marcus, Bright’s branch and services manager for its office in Bristol, Tennessee,
regarding the number of available administrative positions available at The Reese Group, Inc.
(“Reese”) and Bright’s efforts to fill those positions. (Doc. 58.) In her declaration, Marcus
explains that Della Akers, the director of operations for Bright at the relevant time, took Reese’s
job order, which initially requested filling two administrative positions—one for data entry, order
entries, and reconciliation and one for data and space management. (Id. at 2.) According to
Marcus, Bright placed another applicant in one of those positions “because the other applicant
had more diverse employment experience in the private sector and her skills-set was a better fit
for the prospective employer.” (Id.) Marcus further avers that, after filling the first position,
Reese contacted Bright and cancelled the request for the second position without providing a
reason for the cancellation. (Id.) As a result, Bright filled only one position for Reese, and,
according to Marcus, that position was the only position that became available while Campbell’s
job application was active with Bright. (Id. at 2‒3.)
After Bright filed its response brief and Marcus’s additional declaration, Campbell
moved to conduct limited discovery, arguing that Bright withheld information and documents in
discovery and that Marcus’s declaration presented new evidence. (Doc. 59.) On July 10, 2020,
1
The evidence the Court relied on in making its decision is set forth in its memorandum opinion
granting summary judgment (Doc. 52, at 1‒7) and will not be repeated here.
2
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United States Magistrate Judge Cynthia Wyrick entered an order denying Campbell’s motion for
permission to conduct discovery. (Doc. 65.) In her order, Magistrate Judge Wyrick found that,
although Bright “disclosed some information later than preferred,” it disclosed necessary
information early enough that Campbell “should have been fully aware of the key information
prior to responding to [Bright’s] motion for summary judgment.” (Id. at 5.) As a result,
Magistrate Judge Wyrick concluded that Campbell’s motion to reopen discovery was untimely,
especially because Campbell waited until an unfavorable ruling on summary judgment to seek
additional discovery and because she failed to bring any discovery issues to the Court’s attention
in a timely manner. (Id. at 5‒6.)
Campbell’s motion for the Court to alter or amend its order granting Bright’s motion for
summary judgment (Doc. 55) is now ripe for the Court’s review.
II.
STANDARD OF LAW
Under Rule 59(e), a court may alter or amend a judgment when there is a clear error of
law, newly discovered evidence, or an intervening change in controlling law, as well as to
prevent manifest injustice. ACLU v. McCreary Cnty., 607 F.3d 439, 450 (6th Cir. 2010);
GenCorp, Inc. v. Am. Int’l Underwriters, 178 F.3d 804, 833–34 (6th Cir. 1999).
III.
ANALYSIS
Campbell’s Title VII and THRA retaliation claims are entirely premised on her assertion
that Bright did not place her in an administrative position at any of its clients because she
engaged in protected activity while working for her previous employer. (See Doc. 12, at 17.)
Circumstantial evidence of retaliation is evaluated under the burden-shifting framework set forth
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in McDonnell Douglas v. Green, 411 U.S. 792 (1973).2 Under McDonnell Douglas, the plaintiff
bears the initial burden to establish a prima facie case of retaliation, which requires that she
show: (1) she engaged in protected activity; (2) her exercise of protected activity was known by
Bright; (3) thereafter, Bright took an action that was materially adverse to her; and (4) a causal
connection existed between the protected activity and the materially adverse action. Jones v.
Johanns, 264 F. App’x 463, 466 (6th Cir. 2007); Proffitt v. Metro. Gov’t of Nashville &
Davidson Cnty., Tenn., 150 F. App’x 439, 442 (6th Cir. 2005).
In granting summary judgment in favor of Bright, the Court found that Campbell
proffered sufficient proof that Bright took an adverse employment action against her to the extent
it did not place her in an available administrative position at Reese. (Doc. 52, at 11‒12.) The
Court, however, found that Campbell failed to meet her burden of proffering evidence that a
causal connection existed between her protected activity and Bright’s decision not to place her at
Reese. (Id. at 12‒13.) In her motion to alter or amend, Campbell primarily argues that: (1) she
suffered other adverse employment actions that support her retaliation claim; and (2) there was
sufficient evidence in the record to support the reasonable inference that Bright’s failure to place
her was causally connected to her protected activity. (See generally Doc. 56.)
A. Adverse Employment Action
Campbell first argues that she suffered several adverse employment actions in addition to
Bright’s failure to place her in an administrative position at Reese. (Id. at 13‒18.) As the Court
explained in ruling on Bright’s motion for summary judgment, to establish that a defendant took
2
In granting Bright’s motion for summary judgment, the Court found that Campbell did not
proffer direct evidence of retaliation. (Doc. 52, at 9‒10.) Campbell’s motion to alter or amend
does not ask that the Court alter or amend its ruling as to whether she proffered direct evidence
of retaliation. (See Doc. 56.)
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an adverse employment action, a plaintiff must show “that a reasonable employee would have
found the challenged action materially adverse, which . . . means it well might have dissuaded a
reasonable worker from making or supporting a charge of discrimination.” Burlington N. &
Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. White, 548 U.S. 53, 67 (2006). Stated another way, the antiretaliation
provision of Title VII prohibits “actions that are likely to deter victims of discrimination from
complaining to the EEOC, the courts, and their employers.” Id. at 68. Failing to hire a person
for a particular position qualifies as an adverse employment action. See id. at 60, 67 (holding
that adverse employment actions in retaliation cases “extend” beyond “ultimate employment
decisions,” like “hiring, granting leave, discharging, promoting, and compensating”).
Determining whether Bright took other adverse employment actions beyond not placing
Campbell in administrative positions at Reese is a slightly more complicated inquiry, further
complicated by the nature of Campbell’s relationship with Bright. Bright was not, and has never
been, Campbell’s employer; rather it is a staffing agency that places individuals in positions at its
clients and becomes those individuals’ employer upon placement. As a result, Campbell’s
relationship with Bright is more akin to someone seeking a job from a prospective employer.
The Court’s independent research suggests that Title VII retaliation claims against prospective
employers are rare; rather, retaliation claims are typically premised on an employee’s allegation
that her present or former employer retaliated against her for engaging in protected activity. In
such cases, it makes sense to define adverse employment actions more broadly because a current
employer’s retaliatory conduct may not rise to the level of terminating the employee or failing to
promote the employee but may nonetheless have a material impact on the nature of the
employee’s relationship with his or her employer. Burlington, 548 U.S. at 67‒68 (noting that
refusal to invite an employee to lunch is normally a “nonactionable petty slight” but that
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excluding an employee from a weekly training lunch that contributes to professional
advancement “might well deter a reasonable employee from complaining about
discrimination.”). That is why the Supreme Court has held that adverse employment actions in
the retaliation context include any actions that may dissuade a reasonable worker from making or
supporting a charge of discrimination or that deter victims of discrimination from complaining to
the EEOC, the courts, and their employers. Id. at 67‒68. Such considerations, however, are of
lesser utility in determining whether a prospective employer has taken an adverse employment
action against a prospective employee because the prospective employer does not have the same
incentive to deter protected activity, especially when the prospective employee engaged in
protected activity while employed elsewhere. While Title VII aims to dissuade all employers
from taking actions that would deter a reasonable employee from complaining about
discrimination, it is difficult to see how a prospective employer can retaliate against a
prospective employee for engaging in protected activity outside of meaningful consideration of
the employee as an applicant for an open position and its ultimate hiring decision.
In this case, in opposing summary judgment, Campbell did not identify specific adverse
employment actions she claimed Bright took against her except for failing to place her in an open
position. (See Doc. 46, at 11‒17.) While Campbell did identify perceived slights and hostility
she experienced in her interactions with Marcus and Bright, she did not argue, factually or
legally, that those interactions in isolation constituted adverse employment actions to
demonstrate a prima facie case of retaliation. (See id.) Rather, Campbell specifically argued that
Bright’s failure to place her was the adverse employment action she suffered:
A reasonable jury could certainly find that a placement agency’s deceitfully
refusing to refer a person because he/she had filed EEOC charges against a prior
employer while at the same time deliberately misleading him/her into believing
that the placement agency was attempting to refer him/her to a job position would
6
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deter a reasonable person from pursuing his/her EEOC-related protected rights.
(Doc. 46, at 21.) She further argued that:
Any employee being subjected to current Title VII discrimination and considering
whether to quit or file EEOC charges would certainly be deterred from objecting
about the discrimination or filing EEOC charges over the discrimination if she
knew that employment agencies would never recommend or refer him/her to
future employment because of those EEOC charges.
(Id. at 23 (emphasis in original).)
The Court concluded that Campbell satisfied her burden at the prima facie stage to
demonstrate that Bright took an adverse employment action against her by failing to place her in
a position at Reese. (Doc. 52, at 11‒12.) This remains true, but Campbell has otherwise failed
to demonstrate that the Court erred in finding that this is the only adverse employment action
supported by the evidence in the record.
B. Causal Connection
Having determined that the only adverse employment action Bright arguably took against
her was failing to hire her for an open position with Reese, the only question remaining is
whether Campbell proffered sufficient evidence to raise the inference that her protected activity
was likely the reason for Bright not placing her in a position at Reese. In granting summary
judgment in favor of Bright, the Court concluded that Campbell failed to meet her burden of
proffering evidence supporting a causal connection between her protected activity and an adverse
employment action taken by Bright. (Doc. 52, at 12‒14.) In arriving at this conclusion, the
Court noted that, in the context of a failure-to-hire retaliation claim, a plaintiff satisfies the causal
connection requirement by proffering evidence that she was treated less favorably than similarly
situated individuals who did not engage in protected activity. (Id.)
In moving to alter or amend, Campbell contends the “comparator” analysis is
inappropriate for determining whether a causal connection exists because Marcus never asks
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applicants about EEOC activity and Bright does not keep internal documentation about
applicant’s EEOC activities. (Doc. 56, at 2.) Based on Marcus’s averments, Campbell appears
to argue that the comparator analysis is inapplicable here because it was impossible for her to
know whether the applicant Bright placed ever engaged in protected activity:
Nothing on the internal Bright documents suggests that the lady had ever filed
EEOC charges against any prior employer. The applicant might or might not
have engaged in prior EEOC activity. Under Bright’s operating procedures,
Manager Marcus was not supposed to know one way or the other whether any
applicant has ever filed previous EEOC charges.
(Doc. 56, at 7 (emphasis added).) Campbell’s acknowledgement that the applicant Bright placed
“might or might not have engaged in prior EEOC activity” demonstrates precisely why she fails
to meet her burden as it relates to Bright’s decision to place another applicant at one of the Reese
positions in April 2017. See Horn v. City of Cleveland, 674 F. App’x 511, 519‒20 (6th Cir.
2017) (explaining that evidence that an employer treated an employee “differently from similarly
situated employees is relevant to causation”); see also Tomanovich v. City of Indianapolis, 457
F.3d 656, 668 (7th Cir. 2006) (affirming district court’s grant of summary judgment on a
plaintiff’s retaliation claim because the plaintiff “did not establish that a similarly situated
employee who did not engage in statutorily protected activity was treated more favorably”). As
the Court previously explained, if the applicant Bright placed engaged in protected activity, then
Campbell’s protected activity cannot supply the requisite causal connection for Bright’s decision
not to place her in that position. (Doc. 52, at 13.) Without that information, which Campbell
could have obtained in the discovery process,3 she cannot satisfy her burden of demonstrating
3
Campbell may argue that because Marcus does not ask applicants about EEOC activity and
because Bright does not keep documentation about applicant’s EEOC activity, she could not
know whether the applicant Bright placed ever engaged in protected activity. But that argument
ignores that she could have engaged in third-party discovery, including seeking a deposition of
the applicant Bright ultimately placed. It also ignores that there is not any deposition testimony
from Marcus or any other Bright employee in the record. Campbell could have engaged in
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that her protected activity was likely the reason Bright selected another applicant regardless of
how Marcus comported herself in her interactions with Campbell. Viewing the evidence in the
light most favorable to Campbell does not require the Court to assume that the applicant Bright
placed never engaged in protected activity because there is no evidence about that issue to view
in Campbell’s favor.4
Campbell also failed to meet her burden of proffering evidence sufficient to raise the
inference that her protected activity was likely the reason Bright did not place her in the second
position Reese asked it to fill in April 2017. At the time Bright moved for summary judgment,
there was simply no evidence in the record regarding what happened to the second position after
Reese requested that Bright fill it. Campbell wants the Court to infer, based primarily on her
interactions with Marcus, that Bright elected not to fill the position at all and that it did so
because of her protected activity, but the only evidence in the record at the time Bright moved
for summary judgment was that Reese asked Bright to fill two positions. Without evidence in
additional discovery aimed at finding out more about the applicant Bright placed at Reese and
what Bright knew when it placed the other applicant, but it appears that Campbell elected not to
seek that information. Campbell cannot now argue that the absence of information she does not
appear to have sought precludes summary judgment.
4
Even assuming that Campbell had met her burden of demonstrating a causal connection, her
retaliation claim would still fail because she did not proffer sufficient evidence suggesting that
Bright’s legitimate, non-retaliatory reason for selecting the other applicant was pretext for
retaliation. In moving for summary judgment, Bright explained that it selected another applicant
for this position because the “other applicant had more diverse employment experience in the
private sector and her skills set was a better fit for the prospective employer.” (Doc. 43, at 29‒
30.) In opposing summary judgment, Campbell did not provide evidence that this legitimate,
non-retaliatory reason for choosing the other applicant had no basis in fact, did not actually
motivate Bright to select the other applicant, or was an insufficient basis for Bright to select the
other applicant. See Proffitt, 150 F. App’x at 442. To the contrary, Campbell specifically
averred that she “was not insisting that the lady who Bright Services referred [to Reese] . . .
could not perform that particular job.” (Doc. 47, at 14.) Rather, she simply believed that she
could also perform that job. (Id.) As a result, Campbell also failed to satisfy her burden to
produce evidence from which a reasonable jury could infer that Bright’s non-retaliatory reason
for selecting the other applicant was actually pretext for retaliation.
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the record regarding what ultimately happened to the second position,5 it is unreasonable to infer
that Bright simply elected to leave the position unfilled indefinitely or that it likely did so
because Campbell engaged in protected activity at her prior employer.6
It was Campbell’s burden at the prima facie stage to produce evidence of a causal
connection between her protected activity and an adverse employment action. Campbell failed
to satisfy that burden and none of the evidence identified or arguments advanced in her motion to
alter or amend compels a contrary decision. Accordingly, the Court will DENY Campbell’s
motion to alter or amend the Court’s memorandum opinion granting Bright’s motion for
summary judgment.
IV.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated herein, Campbell’s motion to alter or amend (Doc. 55) is
DENIED.
AN APPROPRIATE JUDGMENT WILL ENTER.
/s/ Travis R. McDonough
TRAVIS R. MCDONOUGH
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
5
Again, it appears that Campbell failed to obtain information necessary to satisfy her burden at
the prima facie stage during discovery.
6
In responding to Campbell’s motion to alter or amend, Bright filed a second declaration from
Marcus explaining that Reese cancelled its request to fill the second position. (Doc. 58.) While
such evidence provides Bright’s explanation as to why it did not select Campbell to fill the
position and would have been helpful if provided at the time it moved for summary judgment,
the fact that Bright did not provide that explanation until after Campbell moved to alter or amend
the Court’s judgment has no impact on the Court’s conclusion that she failed to meet her burden
at the prima facie stage with regard to causal connection.
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