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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS DALLAS DIVISION RICO SIMMONS, § § Plaintiff, § § v. § CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:19-CV-1206-B § TRITON ELEVATOR, LLC, and § DERALD ARMSTRONG, § § Defendants. § MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Before the Court is Defendants Triton Elevator, LLC (âTritonâ) and Derald Armstrong (âArmstrongâ)âs Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 56). For the reasons explained below, the Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART Defendantsâ motion. I. BACKGROUND1 A. Factual Background2 This is an employment discrimination action by Plaintiff Rico Simmons, a Black man who formerly worked for Triton. Doc. 57, Defs.â Br., 1; Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 5. Triton is an elevator manufacturer service and repair company where Armstrong serves as Chief Operating Officer. Doc. 1 The Court draws its factual account from the summary-judgment record. For the sake of brevity, the Court summarizes only those factual allegations raised by the partiesâ briefing and pertinent to the Courtâs analysis. 2 Throughout this Order, the Court uses the ECF-generated page numbersârather than any page numbering provided by the partiesâto refer to specific pages in Defendantsâ appendix (Doc. 58) and Plaintiffâs appendix (Doc. 60). - 1 - 60, Pl.âs App., 8. In August 2018, Triton hired Plaintiff as an engineer. Id. at 11, 118. Plaintiffâs direct supervisor was Rick David. Id. at 142. According to David, Plaintiff performed satisfactory work at Triton, was amenable to learning new techniques, and received a promised raise three months into his employment due to his satisfactory performance. Id. Further, Plaintiff never received any formal discipline or warning while employed with Triton. Id. at 142â43. Despite his satisfactory work performance, Plaintiffâs employment with Triton was far from smooth sailing. Plaintiff claims that while employed at Triton, he was subjected to several âracist and offensiveâ comments. Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 5. Further, he claims he was fired by Armstrong due to his complaints about these comments. Doc. 39, Second Am. Compl., ¶ 30. The Court details Plaintiffâs allegations of racially offensive comments at Triton, followed by the circumstances surrounding Plaintiffâs termination, below. 1. Racially Offensive Comments To start, Plaintiff explains that while in his own office, he overheard Danny DuncanâArmstrongâs former brother-in-law and a Director at Tritonâusing the terms ân*****â and âboyâ in a conversation with David. Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 140, 144; Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 11 , 117. Then, Duncan and David began talking about Plaintiff without âusing these terms out loud anymore[.]â Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 140. Duncan denies using the terms. Id. at 208â09.3 Additionally, Plaintiff alleges that prior to that conversation between Duncan and David, David once used the term âmonkeyâ to refer to a Black employee. Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 12. David acknowledges that he did refer to an individual as a âmonkeyâ but denies that he was referring to a 3 This is the incident leading to Plaintiffâs termination and is further detailed in Section I.A.2. - 2 - person of color. Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 143. Plaintiff explains that until this âmonkeyâ comment, Plaintiff never had an issue with DavidâDavid was âvery respectful,â so the âmonkeyâ comment âsurprisedâ Plaintiff. Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 130. Plaintiff surreptitiously recorded a conversation between he and David in which they discuss this use of the term âmonkey.â See Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 52. In the conversation, Plaintiff confronted David on calling a âBlack man . . . a monkey[.]â Id. at 56. David responded that he âwasnât referring to anybody in particularâ and that he meant a âgrease monkey.â Id. Plaintiff then explained how use of terms like âmonkeyâ and âbrotherâ offend him. Id. As the conversation progressed, David apologized to Plaintiff, stated that he respects Plaintiff, and indicated that he did not want Plaintiff to feel uncomfortable. See id. at 69, 76. As Plaintiff acknowledges, David also asked Plaintiff to âhelp [him] to learn how not to be a racist person.â Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 110. Further, Plaintiff claims that David once referred to Davidâs own son as a âwiggerâ and âghettoâ in a conversation with Plaintiff. Id. at 105; Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 58. The latter reference occurred during the recorded conversation mentioned above. David was explaining how his son speaks differently than David or Plaintiffââitâs almost ghetto the way he speaks.â Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 58. When Plaintiff stated that the term âghettoâ was âracist in itself,â David acknowledged that âit is a very stereotypical thing to say, but it defines how he is.â Id. at 58â59. David and Plaintiff then proceeded to discuss their differing viewpoints on the connotation of the term âghetto.â See id. at 59â63. However, David does not recall calling his son a âwigger.â Id. at 144. Next, Plaintiff alleges that after initially confronting David on use of the term âmonkey,â employees began to refer to the âBrother printerâ in the officeâa printer manufactured by a company called âBrotherâââwith an inflection or emphasis on the word âBrotherâ that led [Plaintiff] - 3 - to conclude they were mocking him.â Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 6 (citation omitted); see Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 144. Plaintiff mentioned this issue in his recorded conversation with David, and David apologized and stated he did not mean to offend Plaintiff. Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 56. Plaintiff also alleges that various Triton employees, including Duncan and Kris Hunt (VP of Operations and âinformally in charge of human resourcesâ), referred to him as âboyâ or âhomeboy[.]â Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 5, 12; see, e.g., Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 97, 115; Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 48. For instance, Plaintiff claims Duncan once stated to Plaintiff: âHey homeboy, you canât be chilling in the hallway. You scared me boy.â Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 48. In his deposition, David also testified that Plaintiff was offended when a supervisor stated, âIâll get this to my boy Jake to get it installed.â Id. at 145. According to David, Plaintiff then told those present, âThatâs a racial term and you shouldnât be saying that,â despite that both Jake and the man to whom the supervisor was speaking were White. Id. Further, Plaintiff states that Don Criswell (President and CEO of Triton), Duncan, and Hunt passed by Plaintiffâs office when the office lacked a working light. Id. at 9, 48. According to Plaintiff, the men stated the office was âreally black,â and Hunt stated he could only see Plaintiffâs teeth. Id. at 48. Plaintiff also recounts that Hunt âmade it a point to discuss skits from the Dave Chapelle show, in particular the skits in which the actors frequently used the word ân*****.ââ Id. Finally, Plaintiff recalls two incidents with a secretary: once, she stated Plaintiffâs hair made him look as if he was âfrom the hoodâ and â[s]caryâ; another time, she âconfided to [Plaintiff] in a shameful tone that her grandmother had been African American.â Id. at 48â49. With respect to the second encounter, Plaintiff âunderstood that the secretary was trying to soften her statements about [Plaintiffâs] hair.â Id. at 49. - 4 - Plaintiff claims that his complaints to leadership at Triton about the various remarks âfell on deaf ears.â Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 7. First, Plaintiff states he complained to Armstrong on multiple occasions. Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 49. He explains that when he complained about racist comments to Armstrong in January 2019, Armstrong brushed off his complaints and, at some point, responded that he âhad previously dated a black woman but had never told anyone about it,â thereby suggesting this was a secret. Id.; see Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 98â99 (describing Plaintiffâs complaint to Armstrong); id. at 138â39 (explaining he talked to Armstrong in January 2019). Armstrong claims Plaintiff misconstrued this statement: Armstrong was actually informing Plaintiff he had provided money to an âAfrican-American woman girlfriendâ and did not want others to know because this was âcompany money.â Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 15. Second, Plaintiff expressed his frustration to David in the recorded conversation summarized above. Third, Plaintiff claims he âcomplained to Mr. Huntâ about the âmonkeyâ comment and the âBrotherâ printer terminology. Id. at 49. Based on Plaintiffâs complaints, Criswell discussed the use of the term âthe âbrotherâ printerâ and Davidâs âmonkeyâ comment with David. Id. at 87. Criswell and David determined that David would apologize for using both terms, and Criswell âtook no further action[.]â Id. On his own accord, Plaintiff attempted to educate the office by distributing âJim Crow Etiquetteâ flyers. Id. at 39; Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 102. Further, in light of the âracial commentsâ by David and âmultiple stereotypical comments and questions,â Plaintiff filed a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) on February 7, 2019. Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 228. 2. Plaintiffâs Termination About three weeks after Plaintiff filed his EEOC charge, Armstrong fired Plaintiff. See id. at - 5 - 142, 232. The partiesâ accounts of Plaintiffâs termination vary. The Court begins with Plaintiffâs versions and then summarizes the recollections of Armstrong, David, and Duncan. a. Plaintiffâs Accounts In his deposition, Plaintiff claims that he overheard a conversation between David and Duncan. Id. at 140. According to Plaintiff, David and Duncan were using âracial termsâ including ân*****â and âboy[.]â Id. Upon overhearing them, Plaintiff entered the doorway, and Duncan and David were âreferring to [Plaintiff] now, not using [the] terms out loud anymore[.]â Id. Plaintiff then told Duncan that he can talk to Plaintiff directly. Id. at 140â41. Plaintiff then âasked him againâ and Duncan became âloudâ and said, âf*** you, I donât have to tell you anything[.]â Id. at 141. Plaintiff and Duncan continued to argue, and Armstrong walked in the room. Id. Armstrong asked what was happening, and Plaintiff explained that he wanted Duncan to âtreat [him] like a man and not be disrespectful[.]â Id. at 142. Armstrong then fired Plaintiff, told him to leave, and commented, â[Y]ou filed on people[.]â Id. Plaintiff replied, â[Y]eah, I filed on people who do things to me. . . . Iâm not going to just file on somebody for no f****** reason.â Id. Then, according to Plaintiff, Armstrong âturn[ed] around to [him] and charg[ed].â Id. Duncan stood between Armstrong and Plaintiff, and Armstrong then began saying âf*** it, just do something,â â[f]*** off,â and âIâll f****** kill you,â and âjust call the police[.]â Id. Plaintiffâs declaration differs in the details. In his declaration, Plaintiff claims that after he âinformed [Armstrong] that [Duncan] was using offensive language again,â Armstrong stated that he was âsick of [Plaintiffâs sh**]â and âapproached [Plaintiff] in a physically menacing manner.â Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 50. Armstrong then began to walk away, turned, âand charged toward [Plaintiff] stating[,] âI will hurt you. I will kill you. Youâre going to file on people?ââ Id. Then, Armstrong - 6 - âinformed [Plaintiff] that [he] was fired.â Id. b. Armstrongâs Account Armstrong states that when he entered the office, he âheard [Duncan and Simmons] arguing down the hallway[.]â Doc. 58, Def.âs App., 218. He walked over and asked, âWhat in the hell is going on?â Id. Because Armstrong was angry in the moment, he doesnât remember if he said he was âsick ofâ Plaintiffâs âs***[.]â Id. at 218â19. He admits that he mentioned Plaintiff âfiled on people,â but says he says he did so only after Plaintiff brought up talking to an attorney. Id. at 219. Armstrong explains that when Plaintiff told Armstrong he was going to go to his attorney, Armstrong then said, âIt doesnât surprise me. You filed on people already.â Id. Armstrong states he did not mean that Plaintiff âfiled onâ Armstrong or Tritonâinstead, Armstrong was referring to the âcommon knowledgeâ among âeverybodyâ at Triton that Plaintiff had filed on other companies. See id. Additionally, Armstrong claims that Plaintiff called him âa goddamned punk ass honkeyâ as Armstrong began to walk away from the encounter. Id. at 221. c. Davidâs Account David explains that he and Duncan were in Duncanâs office discussing a job. Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 145. Plaintiff then came to the doorway and, because Plaintiff had previously had conversations about this job, stated, âIâm standing right here, you can address me.â Id. Plaintiff began âto get agitated and it felt [to David] as though [Plaintiff] was trying to instigate anger withâ Duncan. Id. at 146. David attempted âto diffuse the situation,â but â[i]t got loud.â Id. Hunt, who handles human resources at Triton, then entered and asked what was happening, and Plaintiff âcontinued to get loudâ; at some point, Hunt called 911. Id. at 87, 146; Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 203. Armstrong entered, âheard what was going on and walked towardâ them. Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 146. - 7 - Plaintiff was becoming louderâat some point âyellingââand Armstrong âsaid he finally had had enough of thisâ and that Plaintiff âdidnât have a job here anymore.â Id. David explains that â[v]erbiage was going back and forth,â and Plaintiff âgot mad at [Armstrong] and called him a punk-ass.â Id. Armstrong then stepped forward toward Plaintiff; Duncan and David stepped between Armstrong and Plaintiff; and Armstrong âcalmed down and told [Plaintiff] he was fired.â Id. d. Duncanâs Account Finally, Duncan explains that he and David were discussing a job, at which point Plaintiff entered the office where they were and told Duncan something along the lines of, âYou need to be talking to me about that job[.]â Id. at 121. Duncan replied, âWell, Iâm talking to your boss about the job.â Id. Plaintiff and Duncan continued to go back and forth on this issue, resulting in âloud discussions.â Id. at 122. Armstrong then âoverhear[d] the yelling,â said something like, âI donât need to put up with this anymore,â and told Plaintiff to leave. Id. The situation was becoming heated, so Duncan stepped between Plaintiff and Armstrong, and someone called 911. Id. Duncan doesnât recall Armstrong mentioning that Plaintiff âhad filed on people[.]â Id. Nor does Duncan recall ever learning that Plaintiff filed an EEOC charge against Triton or any other company. Id. B. Procedural Background Following his termination, Plaintiff filed another EEOC charge against Triton in which he claimed discrimination based on race and retaliation. Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 232. He received his Right-to-Sue Notice on March 19, 2019. Id. at 230. Thereafter, he filed a pro se complaint (Doc. 3) in this Court against Triton and Armstrong. After retaining counsel and filing an amended complaint, as well as amending his complaint in light of the Courtâs partial granting of Defendantsâ motion to dismiss, see Doc. 38, Mem. Op. & Order, 1, Plaintiff filed his operative complaint (Doc. - 8 - 39). In the complaint, he alleges a hostile work environment claim and a retaliation claim against Triton and Armstrong under 42 U.S.C. § 1981. See Doc. 39, Second Am. Compl., ¶¶ 20â31. Now, Defendants move for summary judgment on both claims. See Doc. 56, Defs.â Mot., 1. Because Defendantsâ motion is ripe, the Court considers it below. II. LEGAL STANDARD Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a) provides that summary judgment is appropriate âif 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.â Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The substantive law governing a matter determines which facts are material to a case. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). The summary-judgment movant bears the burden of proving that no genuine issue of material fact exists. Latimer v. Smithkline & French Labâys, 919 F.2d 301, 303 (5th Cir. 1990). Usually, this requires the movant to identify âthose portions of the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with affidavits, if any, which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.â Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986) (quotation marks omitted). Once the summary-judgment movant has met this burden, the burden shifts to the non-movant to âgo beyond the pleadings and designate specific factsâ showing that a genuine issue exists. Little v. Liquid Air Corp., 37 F.3d 1069, 1075 (5th Cir. 1994) (per curiam) (citing Celotex, 477 U.S. at 325). âThis burden is not satisfied with âsome metaphysical doubt as to the material facts,â by âconclusory allegations,â by âunsubstantiated assertions,â or by only a âscintillaâ of evidence.â Id. (citations omitted). Instead, the non-moving party must âcome forward with specific facts showing - 9 - that there is a genuine issue for trial.â Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986) (emphasis in original) (citations and quotation marks omitted). â[C]ourts are required to view the facts and draw reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the party opposing the summary[-]judgment motion.â Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372, 378 (2007) (alterations incorporated) (quotations marks omitted). But the Court need not âsift through the record in search of evidence to support a partyâs opposition to summary judgment.â Ragas v. Tenn. Gas Pipeline Co., 136 F.3d 455, 458 (5th Cir. 1998) (citation and quotation marks omitted). If the non-movant is unable to make the required showing, the Court must grant summary judgment. Little, 37 F.3d at 1076. III. ANALYSIS4 Below, the Court first grants summary judgment in favor of Defendants on Plaintiffâs hostile work environment claim because, even assuming Plaintiffâs allegations are true, they do not demonstrate a hostile work environment. Then, the Court explains that material issues of fact exist as to why Plaintiff was terminated. Accordingly, the Court denies summary judgment on Plaintiffâs retaliation claim. A. The Court Grants Summary Judgment in Favor of Defendants on Plaintiffâs Hostile Work Environment Claim. To prevail on a hostile work environment claim, the plaintiff must show: 4 âBecause employment discrimination claims brought under § 1981 are analyzed under the evidentiary framework applicable to claims arising under Title VII,â the Court cites to cases analyzing Title VII claims to the extent they are relevant. See Johnson v. VT Halter Marine, Inc., 820 F. Appâx 283, 285 n.3 (5th Cir. 2020) (per curiam) (citation and quotation marks omitted). - 10 - (1) he belongs to a protected group; (2) he was subjected to unwelcome harassment; (3) the harassment complained of was based on race; (4) the harassment complained of affected a term, condition, or privilege of employment; and (5) the employer knew or should have known of the harassment in question and failed to take prompt remedial action. Collier v. Dall. Cnty. Hosp. Dist., 827 F. Appâx 373, 376 (5th Cir. 2020) (per curiam) (alterations incorporated) (quoting Hernandez v. Yellow Transp., Inc., 670 F.3d 644, 651 (5th Cir. 2012)). To satisfy the fourth element, â[t]he harassment must be âsufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the conditions of the victimâs employment and create an abusive working environment[.]ââ Id. at 377 (quoting Ramsey v. Henderson, 286 F.3d 264, 268 (5th Cir. 2002)). Defendants assert that even if all factual disputes are resolved in Plaintiffâs favor, his allegations âdo not show harassment sufficiently severe or pervasive to constitute an abusive working environment[.]â Doc. 57, Defs.â Br., 7. In response, Plaintiff emphasizes that almost every Triton employee âsaid something offensive toâ him; the offensive comments occurred at least weekly; and Triton failed to address Plaintiffâs complaints. Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 12. The Court agrees with Defendants. Because Plaintiff alleges numerous incidents to support his hostile work environment claim, the Court first re-summarizes Plaintiffâs relevant allegations below. Then, the Court explains why these allegations are insufficient to sustain Plaintiffâs claim. Plaintiff alleges several instances of offensive remarks by employees at Triton. First, Plaintiff alleges that while in his own office, he overheard Duncan using the terms ân*****â and âboyâ in a conversation with Rick David, and then Duncan and David began talking about Plaintiff without âusing these terms out loud anymore[.]â Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 140. Duncan denies using the terms altogether. Id. at 208â09. In Davidâs account of that conversation with Duncan, he states that they were discussing a job, and Plaintiff then came to the doorway and stated, âIâm standing right here, - 11 - you can address me,â presumably because Plaintiff had been involved in discussions about this job. Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 145â146. David states that Plaintiff then began âto get agitated and it felt as though he was trying to instigate anger withâ Duncan. Id. at 146. Next, Plaintiff alleges that David once used the term âmonkeyâ to refer to a Black employee. Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 12. David admits he referred to a person as a monkey but denies that he was referring to a person of color. Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 143. Additionally, Plaintiff admits that until this âmonkeyâ incident, Plaintiff never had an issue with DavidâDavid was âvery respectful,â so the âmonkeyâ comment âsurprisedâ Plaintiff. Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 130. Plaintiff provides a transcript of the conversation that Plaintiff surreptitiously recorded between he and David. See Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 52. In this conversation, Plaintiff confronted David for calling a âBlack man . . . a monkey[.]â Id. at 56. David responded that he âwasnât referring to anybody in particularâ and that he meant a âgrease monkey.â Id. Plaintiff then explained how hearing terms like âmonkeyâ and âbrotherâ offends him. Id. As the conversation continued, David apologized, expressed his respect for Plaintiff, and stated that he did not want Plaintiff to feel uncomfortable. See id. at 69, 76. In Plaintiffâs words, David asked Plaintiff to âhelp [him] to learn how not to be a racist person.â Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 110. Further, David, when talking to Plaintiff, once referred to his own son as a âwiggerâ and âghetto.â Id. at 105; Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 58. The âghettoâ comment occurred during the recorded conversation when David was explaining how his son speaks in a different manner than David or Plaintiff: â[I]tâs almost ghetto the way he speaks.â Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 58. When Plaintiff stated that the term âghettoâ was âracist,â David stated that âit is a very stereotypical thing to say, but it defines how [his son] is.â Id. at 58â59. David and Plaintiff then proceeded to discuss their differing - 12 - viewpoints on the connotation of the term âghetto.â See id. at 59â63. Next, Plaintiff alleges that after confronting David on use of the term âmonkey,â employees began to refer to the âBrother printerâ in the officeâa printer with a manufacturer called âBrotherâââwith an inflection or emphasis on the word âBrotherâ that led [Plaintiff] to conclude they were mocking him.â Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 6 (citation omitted); see Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 144. Plaintiff raised this issue in his recorded conversation with David, during which David apologized and stated he did not mean to offend Plaintiff. Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 56. Additionally, Plaintiff alleges that various Triton employees referred to him as âboyâ or âhomeboy[.]â Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 5, 12; see, e.g., Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 97, 115; Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 48. David provides an example of an incident in which a supervisor stated, âIâll get this to my boy Jake to get it installed.â Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 145. According to David, Plaintiff then âvery quickly said that â[t]hatâs a racial term and you shouldnât be saying that,ââ despite that both Jake and the man to whom the supervisor was speaking were White. Id. In addition to offensive terminology, Plaintiff recounts a handful of offensive interactions with coworkers. For example, Plaintiff states that Criswell, Duncan, and Hunt passed by Plaintiffâs office when the office lacked a working light. Id. at 48. Plaintiff claims these men stated the office was âreally blackâ and that Hunt stated he could only see Plaintiffâs teeth. Id. Next, Plaintiff recounts that Hunt âmade it a point to discuss skits from the Dave Chapelle show, in particular the skits in which the actors frequently used the word ân*****.ââ Id. Plaintiff also recalls two incidents with a secretary: once, she stated Plaintiffâs hair made him look as if he was âfrom the hoodâ and â[s]caryâ; another time, she âconfided to [Plaintiff] in a shameful tone that her grandmother had been African American.â Id. at 48â49. Plaintiff âunderstood thatâ in this second encounter, âthe secretary was - 13 - trying to soften her statements about [Plaintiffâs] hair.â Id. at 49. Finally, Plaintiff claims that when he complained about racist comments, Armstrong brushed off his complaints and even once stated that Armstrong âhad previously dated a black woman but had never told anyone about it.â Id. Even taking all of these allegations together as true, the Court holds they do not rise to the level of a hostile work environment. âHarassment is sufficiently âsevere or pervasive enoughâ to create a hostile work environment when it is âobjectively hostile or abusiveââmeaning âan environment that a reasonable person would find hostile or abusiveââand is subjectively perceived by the victim as abusive.â Johnson v. PRIDE Indus., Inc., âF.4thâ, 2021 WL 3440524, at *4 (5th Cir. 2021) (citation omitted). To decide whether a work environment is objectively hostile, the Court considers the totality of the circumstances, including âthe frequency of the discriminatory conduct; its severity; whether it is physically threatening or humiliating, or a mere offensive utterance; and whether it unreasonably interferes with an employeeâs work performance.â Collier, 827 F. Appâx at 377 (quoting Hernandez, 670 F.3d at 651). âNo single factor is required.â Johnson, 2021 WL 3440524, at *4 (alteration incorporated) (citation omitted). But the alleged discriminatory conduct âmust be more than rude or offensive comments or teasing.â Collier, 827 F. Appâx at 377 (alterations incorporated) (citation omitted). In White v. Government Employees Insurance Company, 457 F. Appâx 374 (5th Cir. 2012) (per curiam), for example, the Fifth Circuit held that the plaintiffâs allegations did not ârise to the level of severity or pervasiveness required to support a hostile work environment claim.â Id. at 381. There, the plaintiff alleged: (1) that a coworker called a Black client âa ân*****ââ in the plaintiffâs presence; - 14 - (2) that the same coworker referred to an office as âghettoâ; and (3) that another coworker stated that one Black employee âalways wanted to be a white female.â Id. at 380â81. In holding these allegations insufficient, the Fifth Circuit explained that these incidents were not physically threatening or humiliating; the comments were âisolated remarksâ; and the ân*****â comment was not directed toward the plaintiff. Id. at 381. Additionally, the court noted that the plaintiff did not point to evidence that these comments affected her work performance. Id. at 381â82 (citations omitted). The Fifth Circuit thus concluded that â[t]he race-based comments alleged . . . pale in comparison, both in severity and frequency, to the kind of verbal harassmentâ that sustains a hostile work environment claim. Id. at 381 (citation and quotation marks omitted).5 In contrast, in Johnson v. PRIDE Industries, the Fifth Circuit found the plaintiff created a fact issue regarding whether he endured sufficiently severe or pervasive harassment. 2021 WL 3440524, at *4. The plaintiff, a Black man, presented evidence that a supervisor in the defendantâcompany used the âthe Mexican-Spanish equivalent of ân*****ââ twice in the plaintiffâs presence when the plaintiff was the âonly black person present[.]â Id. at *5. Further, this supervisor âregularly used racial invective, referring to black employees, including [the plaintiff], as . . . âf***ing n*****sââ and âf***ing blacks.â Id. Additionally, the supervisor referred to the plaintiff by terms that, though not âintrinsically offensive,â were never used to refer to âother, non-black employeesâ and thus may have 5 See also Dailey v. Shintech, Inc., 629 F. Appâx 638, 640, 644 (5th Cir. 2015) (per curiam) (finding an employeeâs racially offensive commentsâcalling the plaintiff âa âblack little mother f****rââ at least twice and stating that he would âkick [the plaintiffâs] black assâ did ânot rise to the level of âsevere or pervasiveâ harassmentâ); Frazier v. Sabine River Auth. La., 509 F. Appâx 370, 371â72, 374â75 (5th Cir. 2013) (per curiam) (holding the plaintiffâs allegations were insufficient to support a prima facie case of hostile work environment where he alleged that a co-worker used âthe word ân*****â inâ the plaintiffâs presence; that the plaintiff heard another coworker used âthe word âNegreetââ; and that a coworker âmade a noose and gestured as though he was hanging it around another [coworkerâs] neckâ in the plaintiffâs presence). - 15 - been âbelittling.â Id. at *7. The supervisor also twice hid paperwork the plaintiff had submitted for a promotion and gave the plaintiff âless desirable work assignments.â Id. Finally, the plaintiff was forced âto take a medical leave of absence . . . and go on a reduced scheduleâ due to psychological harm resulting from the harassment. Id. Under these circumstances, the Fifth Circuit concluded that there was sufficient evidence for a jury to find that the plaintiff suffered âan objectively hostile or abusive work environment.â Id.6 Here, Plaintiffâs allegations do not demonstrate an objectively hostile or abusive work environment. First, the most egregious alleged remarks were isolated instances rather than recurring slurs. See Collier, 827 F. Appâx at 377 (citation omitted) (directing the Court to examine the frequency and severity of the conduct). According to Plaintiff, David once used the terms âmonkey,â âghetto,â and âwiggerâ; Duncan once used the word ân*****â; and three of the employees once called Plaintiffâs poorly lit office âvery black.â To be sure, all of these remarks are ignorant and deplorable. But unlike the racial slurs in Johnson, where the same supervisor âregularly . . . refer[red] to black employeesâ as âf***ing n*****sâ and âf***ing blacks,â each racial slur here occurred once. See Johnson, 2021 WL 3440524, at *5 (emphasis added). Nor were the remarks of which Plaintiff complains physically threatening or particularly humiliating. See Collier, 827 F. Appâx at 377 (citation omitted). None of the most offensive terms, 6 See also Walker v. Thompson, 214 F.3d 615, 626 (5th Cir. 2000) (finding a fact issue as to whether the plaintiffs endured a hostile work environment where, for three years, the plaintiffs âwere subjected to: comparisons to slaves and monkeys, derisive remarks regarding their African heritage, patently offensive remarks regarding the hair of African-Americans, and conversations in which a [coworker] and supervisor used the word ân*****ââ), abrogated on other grounds by Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. White, 548 U.S. 53, 67â68 (2006); Watkins v. Tex. CES, Inc., 2009 WL 3424736, at *1, *8 (N.D. Tex. Oct. 26, 2009) (denying summary judgment on hostile work environment claim where other employees frequently used the word ân*****â to refer to the plaintiff and other Black individuals; the employees told racist jokes in the plaintiffâs presence; and the plaintiff âarrived at work to find a hangmanâs noose hanging from a railingâ). - 16 - each of which was allegedly used onceâân*****,â âmonkey,â âwigger,â and âghettoââwere directed toward Plaintiff. See White, 457 F. Appâx at 381 (pointing out that the use of the word ân*****â was not directed toward the plaintiff). And even those terms that Plaintiff alleges were repeated often, such as âboyâ and âbrother,â were not used to refer exclusively to Plaintiffâor even to a person of color for that matter. As David explained in his deposition, Plaintiff was once offended when Triton employees referred to a White man as âboy.â See Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 145; cf. Johnson, 2021 WL 3440524, at *7 (noting that the supervisor used some terms only to refer to the plaintiff). And the repeated use of the term âbrotherâ referred to a printer manufactured by a company called âBrother.â Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 6 (citation omitted); see Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 144. The Court recognizes that Plaintiff takes issue with the tone employees used when referring to the âBrotherâ printer. Nevertheless, taken as a whole, Plaintiffâs allegations do not portray physical threat or severe humiliation. Further underscoring the lack of an objectively abusive environment is Plaintiffâs cordial relationship with David. Plaintiff claims that David was the individual who used many of the most racially offensive terms (âghetto,â âwigger,â and âmonkeyâ). Yet Plaintiff provides a transcript of a civil dialogue between Plaintiff and David during which David apologized, stated he respected Plaintiff, and asked Plaintiff to educate him. Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 69, 76. David further states, âI donât want to have you being uncomfortable.â Id. at 76. In that conversation, Plaintiff himself even acknowledged that the comments of which he was complaining were âonly out of fun and joking.â Id. at 65. Finally, Plaintiff has not pointed to evidence indicating how the alleged harassment interfered with his performance. See Collier, 827 F. Appâx at 377 (citation omitted); see, e.g., Hiner v. McHugh, - 17 - 546 F. Appâx 401, 408 (5th Cir. 2013) (per curiam); Johnson v. TCB Constr. Co., 334 F. Appâx 666, 671 (5th Cir. 2009) (per curiam). Instead, the evidence reflects that Plaintiff, leading up to his termination, performed âgood workâ and was amenable to learning new techniques. Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 142. Overall, Plaintiffâs allegations fall short of those required to demonstrate a hostile work environment at summary judgment. Accordingly, the Court GRANTS summary judgment in favor of Defendants on Plaintiffâs hostile work environment claim. B. The Court Denies Summary Judgment on Plaintiffâs Retaliation Claim. To establish a prima facie case of retaliation, the plaintiff must show: â(i) he engaged in a protected activity, (ii) an adverse employment action occurred, and (iii) there was a causal link between the protected activity and the adverse employment action.â Hernandez, 670 F.3d at 657 (citing Taylor v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 554 F.3d 510, 523 (5th Cir. 2008)). âIf the plaintiff successfully presents a prima facie case, the burden shifts to the employer to provide a legitimate, non-retaliatory reason for the adverse employment action.â Id. (citation and quotation marks omitted). âIf the employer satisfies this burden,â the plaintiff must rebut the nonretaliatory reasons offered by his employer and establish âthat the adverse action would not have occurred but for the employerâs retaliatory motive[.]â Collier, 827 F. Appâx at 375 (citations and quotation marks omitted). Put differently, the employee must âestablish[] pretext.â Hague v. Univ. of Tex. Health Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio, 560 F. Appâx 328, 336 (5th Cir. 2014) (unpub.). To do so, âthe plaintiff must do more than cast doubt on whether the employer had just cause for its decision . . . .â Moore v. Eli Lilly & Co., 990 F.2d 812, 815 (5th Cir. 1993) (alterations incorporated) (citation and quotation marks omitted). To withstand summary judgment, the plaintiff âmust show a conflict in substantial - 18 - evidence on the question of whether the employer would not have taken the action but for the protected activity.â Hague, 560 F. Appâx at 336 (citation and quotation marks omitted). âEvidence is substantial if it is of such quality and weight that reasonable and fair-minded men in the exercise of impartial judgment might reach different conclusions.â Long v. Eastfield Coll., 88 F.3d 300, 308 (5th Cir. 1996) (citation and quotation marks omitted). As a preliminary matter, Defendants challenge Plaintiffâs ability to establish a prima facie case of retaliation, but they do not challenge any specific element of Plaintiffâs case. See Doc. 57, Defs.â Br., 10â11. In any event, the Court concludes Plaintiff has met his prima facie burden. First, the record supports a finding that Plaintiff engaged in protected activities: Plaintiff complained to his supervisor (David) and Armstrong, and Plaintiff filed an EEOC charge about Triton. See Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 99â100, 109, 228; see also, e.g., Amanduron v. Am. Airlines, 416 F. Appâx 421, 424 (5th Cir. 2011) (per curiam) (noting that an âinformal complaintâ can be protected activity (citations omitted)). Second, Plaintiff suffered an adverse employment actionâhe was fired. See Doc. 57, Defs.â Br., 1; Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 5. Third, Plaintiff demonstrated a causal link between his complaints and termination. Namely, his termination was no more than two months after his complaint to Armstrong and mere weeks after his filing of an EEOC charge. See Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 98â99 (describing his complaint to Armstrong); id. at 138â39 (explaining he talked to Armstrong in January 2019); id. at 228 (showing an EEOC charge dated February 7, 2019); Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., 50 (stating Plaintiff was terminated on February 27, 2019); see also Dailey, 629 F. Appâx at 643 (stating the Court may consider the employeeâs past disciplinary record and temporal proximity between the adverse action and protected activity (citation omitted)). Further, David stated that Plaintiff performed âgood workâ and had never received a disciplinary warning. Doc. 60, Pl.âs App., - 19 - 142â43. Finally, Plaintiff and Armstrong agree that when Armstrong fired Plaintiff, he mentioned that Plaintiff had âfiled onâ others. Doc. 58, Defs.â App., 142, 219. Accordingly, Plaintiff has established a prima facie case of retaliation. Defendants contend, however, that even assuming Plaintiff established a prima facie case of retaliation, Defendants had a legitimate reason for terminating Plaintiff: He âdisrupt[ed] the workplace when he got into a shouting match with Danny Duncan, engag[ed] in a verbal altercation with [Armstrong], and . . . call[ed] Armstrong a âpunk ass honkey.ââ Doc. 57, Defs.â Br., 11 (alteration incorporated and citations omitted). Given that Defendants identified a nonretaliatory reason for firing Plaintiff, the burden shifts to Plaintiff to âshow a conflict in substantial evidence on the question of whether [Defendants] would not have [fired Plaintiff] but forâ his complaints. Hague, 560 F. Appâx at 336 (citation and quotation marks omitted). To meet this burden, Plaintiff provides three reasons that the record casts doubt upon whether Plaintiffâs termination was actually based on the heated argument: (1) though the witnesses of the argument differ in their accounts of the argument, âall the witnesses agree that [Armstrong] mentioned being fed up withâ Plaintiff; (2) â[n]one of the witnesses characterized [Plaintiff] as the aggressor in any physical confrontation that occurredâ; and (3) Plaintiffâs supervisor stated he was satisfied with Plaintiffâs work performance and had no plan to terminate Plaintiff. Doc. 59, Pl.âs Resp., 14â15. Upon review of the record, the Court holds that Plaintiff has shown a conflict in substantial evidence regarding whether his complaints of racially offensive commentsâas opposed to the heated confrontation on the day of his terminationâmotivated his termination. The Court has already recounted the relevant testimony regarding Plaintiffâs termination. See supra Section I.A.2. And - 20 - these factual accounts vary with respect to what took place during the argument, as well as what Armstrong said when firing Plaintiff. For example, Plaintiff and Armstrong agree that Armstrong mentioned Plaintiffâs filing of complaints, but it is unclear whether this was a reference to complaints about Triton. Further, Plaintiffâs, Davidâs, and Duncanâs accounts all include a statement by Armstrong expressing that Armstrong was put out with Plaintiff, but the reason behind this statement is also unclear. Lastly, as noted above, Plaintiffâs termination on February 27, 2019, was no more than two months after he complained to Armstrong about Duncanâs behavior and weeks after he filed an EEOC charge. Under these circumstances, reasonable fact-finders weighing the competing narratives could conclude Armstrong fired Plaintiff due to his complaints as opposed to his argument with Duncan. See, e.g., Haire v. Bd. of Supervisors of La. State Univ. Agric. & Mech. Coll., 719 F.3d 356, 368 (5th Cir. 2013) (noting [that] the parties âmake competing allegations, and [that] credibility determinations are best left for trialâ); Long, 88 F.3d at 308â09 (reversing the district courtâs grant of summary judgment where âreasonable and fair-minded persons could conclude that the reasons proffered by [the defendant] were pretextsâ). Accordingly, the Court DENIES Defendantsâ motion for summary judgment on the retaliation claim. IV. CONCLUSION For the reasons stated above, the Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART Defendantsâ motion for summary judgment (Doc. 56). Namely, the Court GRANTS summary judgment in favor of Defendants on Plaintiffâs hostile work environment claim but DENIES summary judgment on Plaintiffâs retaliation claim. - 21 - SO ORDERED SIGNED: August 30, 2021. JAN„ J. BOYLYâ | UDMATED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE -2)-
Case Information
- Court
- N.D. Tex.
- Decision Date
- August 30, 2021
- Status
- Precedential