Alan Hobbs v. Sunflower Bank, N.A.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedOctober 31, 2025
Docket2:24-cv-02287
StatusUnknown

This text of Alan Hobbs v. Sunflower Bank, N.A. (Alan Hobbs v. Sunflower Bank, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alan Hobbs v. Sunflower Bank, N.A., (D. Kan. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

ALAN HOBBS,

Plaintiff, Case No. 24-2287-DDC

v.

SUNFLOWER BANK, N.A.,

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

Plaintiff Alan Hobbs alleges that his former employer, defendant Sunflower Bank, N.A., fired him because of his age. Defendant disagrees, asserting that plaintiff’s lackluster performance rightly qualified him for the chopping block, and that no reasonable jury could find that age motivated its decision. Defendant has filed a Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 43). This Order denies defendant’s motion. Plaintiff has raised a triable issue whether defendant treated a similarly situated employee—one much younger than plaintiff—more favorably than it treated plaintiff. A rational jury could infer that discriminatory animus motivated defendant’s decision to discipline and, eventually, terminate plaintiff while taking no action against a younger employee who performed similarly to (or worse than) plaintiff. I. Background Before explaining the dispute underlying this lawsuit, a brief word about plaintiff’s summary-judgment briefing. Plaintiff’s Response asserts an astonishing number of facts—243 additional facts spanning nearly 30 pages and citing 65 exhibits. Our court’s local rule requires briefs opposing to summary judgment to set forth “a concise statement of material facts as to which the party contends a genuine issue exists.” D. Kan. Rule 56.1(b)(1) (emphasis added). Plaintiff’s facts decidedly aren’t concise. Nor are they limited to material issues. The court is unimpressed with this sort of briefing practice, which drains judicial resources by forcing the court to slog through hundreds of facts and dozens of exhibits to discern that few dispositive disputes exist. See Rocky Mountain Wild, Inc. v. U.S. Forest Serv., 56 F.4th 913, 927 (10th Cir. 2022) (“Judges are not like pigs, hunting for truffles buried in briefs.” (quotation cleaned up)).

Litigants opposing summary judgment should limit the fight to the disputed facts that might matter. They shouldn’t fire off every fact in their possession indiscriminately. Disputing facts merely to create disputes doesn’t help anyone’s cause. In the end, plaintiff prevails on this motion. But he succeeds in spite of—not because of—his spaghetti-on-the-wall briefing. The following facts either are uncontroverted or, if controverted, are construed in a light most favorable to plaintiff. Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372, 378 (2007). Plaintiff’s Employment Termination Plaintiff worked for defendant, a national bank. Doc. 42 at 2 (Pretrial Order Stipulations ¶ 2.a.v.). His position title was Commercial Relationship Manager. Id. (Pretrial Order Stipulations ¶ 2.a.vii.). Plaintiff was born in December 1964 and was 56 years old when he

started working for defendant in Spring 2021. Doc. 44-2 at 4, 5 (Hobbs Dep. 9:20–21, 69:9–14). Defendant terminated his employment about two-and-a-half years later when plaintiff was 58 years old. Doc. 42 at 2 (Pretrial Order Stipulations ¶ 2.a.x.). Kevin Vanderweide directly supervised plaintiff. Doc. 48-6 at 1 (Vanderweide Decl. ¶ 3). And Eric Comeau directly supervised Mr. Vanderweide. Doc. 44-3 at 8 (Comeau Dep. 33:2–5). In December 2022, Mr. Comeau implemented new expectations for his team, comprising plaintiff, Mr. Vanderweide, and Cole Buckman—who also worked as a Commercial Relationship Manager. Id. at 17–18 (Comeau Dep. 168:6–170:15). With these new expectations, Mr. Comeau required his group to: (i) have five face-to-face meetings per week, (ii) target businesses “that need a fulsome banking relationship . . . more than a lending need[,]” and (iii) submit weekly sheets documenting their “pipeline[s][.]” Doc. 44-10 at 2 (Def. Ex. J). Defendant instituted other changes around this same time. As part of a shift toward emphasizing deposit growth over loan growth, Doc. 44-9 at 10 (Edwards Dep. 90:23–91:15), defendant set plaintiff’s 2023 goals at $10,000,000 in new loans and $10,000,0000 in new deposits, Doc. 44-11

at 3 (Def. Ex. K). And defendant set Mr. Buckman’s 2023 goals at $12,500,000 in new loans and $12,500,000 in new deposits. Doc. 44-12 at 2 (Def. Ex. L). Following these changes, plaintiff evidently struggled. By May 2023, plaintiff hadn’t logged any new loan production in 2023. Doc. 44-15 at 3 (Def. Ex. O); Doc. 44-2 at 11 (Hobbs Dep. 105:9–21); Doc. 53-2 at 2 (Hickman Decl. ¶ 7) (explaining that the term “production” refers “to loan production”).1 So, defendant placed him on a performance improvement plan (“PIP”). Doc. 44-15 at 2–4 (Def. Ex. O). This PIP directed plaintiff to build a pipeline of prospective businesses within a 250-mile radius of the Kansas City metro area. Id. at 3. In effect then, defendant forced plaintiff to abandon his efforts to pursue business in the Chicago metro

area. See id.; Doc. 48-6 at 4 (Vanderweide Decl. ¶ 24) (explaining that PIP restrictions “deprived [plaintiff] of pursuing and securing business with several companies in the Chicago, Illinois area”); Doc. 48-5 at 12 (Hobbs Dep. 109:13–23). This new geographic restriction was significant because plaintiff had six to eight Chicago-based companies in his pipeline before defendant issued the PIP. Doc. 48-5 at 12 (Hobbs Dep. 108:11–22).2

1 Plaintiff tries to controvert this fact. Doc. 48 at 4–5. To do so, plaintiff cites evidence that he received a bonus based on the total deposits in all the accounts he managed. Id. But that event was based on employees’ total portfolio—not new loan production. Doc. 53-2 at 2 (Hickman Decl. ¶¶ 5–7). So plaintiff has failed to controvert that he didn’t have any new loan production when defendant placed him on a PIP.

2 Defendant controverts this fact, asserting that plaintiff hasn’t adduced evidence that he “truly” had six to eight Chicago companies in his pipeline. Doc. 53 at 13. The court disagrees with defendant. Defendant escalated the PIP to a “Final Written Warning” in September 2023. Doc. 44- 18 at 2–4 (Def. Ex. R). This document explained that plaintiff still had “not met performance expectations regarding sales calls and calls with production partners.” Id. at 3. It also cited plaintiff’s failure to generate new business and his failure to build a sales pipeline. Id. Plaintiff disputes both rationales. Plaintiff had performed satisfactorily in the first two years of his

employment. Doc. 48-6 at 3 (Vanderweide Decl. ¶ 19). And plaintiff maintains that he had built a pipeline of business. For example, in July 2023, plaintiff emailed Mr. Comeau a list of nine companies he was pursuing for business. Doc. 48-12 at 1 (Pl. Ex. FF-4); Doc. 48-8 at 2 (Hobbs Decl. ¶ 6). A reasonable jury could find that plaintiff also complied sufficiently with defendant’s calling requirements. To be sure, Mr. Comeau testified that plaintiff occasionally would fail to comply with the spirit of the requirements by contacting multiple businesses in the same retrial strip center. See Doc. 44-3 at 24 (Comeau Dep. 271:13–25). And plaintiff himself admitted that “if you want to nitpick it,” he technically wasn’t in compliance at all times. Doc. 48-5 at 20

(Hobbs Dep. 141:8–24). But a jury reasonably could find that plaintiff, for the most part, did comply. For instance, Mr. Vanderweide repeatedly reported to his superiors that plaintiff complied with the calling requirements. E.g., Doc. 48-24 at 1 (Pl. Ex. PP); Doc. 48-32 at 1 (Pl. Ex. XX); Doc. 48-27 at 1 (Pl. Ex. SS). Mr. Vanderweide also testified that plaintiff “made cold calls to prospective clients throughout the entirety of the time” Mr. Vanderweide worked for defendant. Doc. 48-6 at 4 (Vanderweide Decl. ¶ 20).

A reasonable jury could credit plaintiff’s testimony that he had Chicago companies lined up in his pipeline.

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