Amber Payne v. Western Michigan University

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedNovember 13, 2025
Docket1:24-cv-00814
StatusUnknown

This text of Amber Payne v. Western Michigan University (Amber Payne v. Western Michigan University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amber Payne v. Western Michigan University, (W.D. Mich. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

AMBER PAYNE,

Plaintiff, Case No. 1:24-cv-814 v. Hon. Hala Y. Jarbou WESTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY,

Defendant. ___________________________________/ OPINION Amber Payne was fired from her job as a custodial employee at Western Michigan University (WMU) within five months of being hired. The university told Payne that it was letting her go because of her poor performance. In response, Payne filed this lawsuit, accusing WMU of discriminating against her because she was pregnant. Now the parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment.1 For the reasons set out below, the Court will deny Payne’s motion and grant WMU’s. I. BACKGROUND Amber Payne was offered a job in Western Michigan University’s custodial department in March 2023. (Offer Letter, ECF No. 25-3, PageID.197.) She began working as a probationary employee on April 3, 2023. (Work Records, ECF No. 27-10.) She learned that she was pregnant that week. (Payne Dep. 36, ECF No. 25-2.) Payne’s top-level supervisor was Juanita Snell, who supervised training in the custodial department. (Graham Aff. ¶ 3, ECF No. 25-12.) Snell was herself overseen by Nick Schmidt, who was the custodial department’s director during Payne’s

1 Payne is only seeking partial summary judgment, as she does not seek judgment on both of her remaining claims. employment. (Id. ¶ 3.) Ultimate authority over employment decisions rests with the human resources department; the person who fired Payne was Kurt Graham, WMU’s director of labor relations. (Id. ¶¶ 1–2.) Payne began having problems soon after starting at WMU. Snell testified that Payne was

not thorough and took poorly to instruction; Snell noted one instance when Payne “got smart” with a supervisor who told her to clean something again. (Snell Dep. 69–70, ECF No. 25-4.) A supervisor to whom Payne was assigned shortly after starting, Robin McPherson, testified that she had to coach Payne on proper vacuuming technique not long after Snell had instructed Payne on the matter. (McPherson Dep. 45, ECF No. 25-6.) Karisa Miller, who supervised Payne following McPherson, testified that she had to ask Payne to redo incomplete work. (Miller Dep. 35–36, ECF No. 25-5.) At Payne’s thirty-day evaluation, Snell graded Payne’s performance as “satisfactory” in four respects and “unsatisfactory” in three. The quality of Payne’s work, her acceptance of instructions and regulations, and her attendance were all deemed unsatisfactory. (First Evaluation, ECF No. 25-10, PageID.270.) When Payne had her sixty-day evaluation in June, Snell concluded

that Payne’s performance had improved. (Second Evaluation, ECF No. 25-13.) Payne was marked as “satisfactory” in all respects other than attendance. (Id.) According to Snell, Payne’s “work ethic” began to decline again after her sixty-day evaluation. Snell reported “getting a lot of complaints from various people on campus” about Payne’s “disappearing” during the day. (Snell Dep. 102.) Matters came to a head shortly before Payne’s final probationary evaluation. On August 17, custodial supervisor Louis Arnett found Payne laying down on a couch in a dark room with her eyes closed. (Arnett Dep. 76.) Payne testified that she was sitting up when Arnett came into the room and had not been sleeping. (Payne Dep. 75.) According to Arnett, he had to call out to Payne to get her to respond. (Arnett Dep. 76.) When he asked what she was doing, she said she was taking a little rest (id.) and that there was nothing to do, which he regarded as a “horrible” response (id. at 105). Arnett told Payne it “wasn’t cool” for her to be resting while not on break; he reminded her that there was always work to be done and directed her to do upkeep cleaning, such as washing doorframes and polishing water

fountains. (Id.; Snell Firing Email, ECF No. 25-16, PageID.309.) Payne testified that she took a break because she felt very dizzy and overheated, but she admitted that she did not tell Arnett that she was unwell. (Payne Dep. 79.) Payne could not remember telling Arnett that she had nothing to do, but she acknowledged that he instructed her to clean the water fountains and doorframes. (Id.) Arnett regarded it as “very important” to inform Snell and the other supervisors of this incident with Payne and convey his belief that Payne should fail probation. (Arnett Dep. 60–61.) He sent an email on August 21 with the details of this interaction, and his opinion that Payne should not pass probation, to Schmidt and the other supervisors. (Snell Firing Email, PageID.308.) He followed up the next day with yet more evidence of Payne’s unsuitability, including complaints from coworkers that Payne did not help them clean and that they did not want to work with her in

the future. (Arnett Email, ECF No. 25-17.) Others who worked with Payne agreed that she had failed her probationary period; Miller testified to a “consensus” among custodial supervisors about the inadequacy of Payne’s performance. (Miller Dep. 44.) Schmidt testified that “all of the supervisors and custodians” who worked with Payne thought her frequently being on her phone “was a problem.” (Schmidt Dep. 55, ECF No. 25-9.) He also said that he and the custodial supervisors were united in the belief that Payne should not pass probation. (Id. at 94.) Snell passed the supervisors’ consensus on to the university’s HR department. (Id. at 69.) Schmidt also emailed Amy Moran, an HR representative, with the supervisors’ point of view. (Schmidt Email, ECF No. 25-19, PageID.315.) He pointed out that Snell had attempted to terminate Payne early in her probationary period because of her attendance issues but that HR had counseled in favor of allowing her to continue. Schmidt said that because Payne had shown little improvement HR should now sanction her firing. (Id.) According to Payne, the attendance issues noted in her first two evaluations were caused

by her pregnancy; her absences in April and May were excused by doctors’ notes (Payne Dep. 45, 48, 89), but Payne acknowledged that she left work early and arrived late on more than one occasion without presenting a doctor’s note (id. at 89). Payne also admitted that she never asked for accommodations. (Id. at 85–86.) Payne did not tell her supervisors that she was pregnant (id. at 49–50), but Snell learned of her situation before her first evaluation. At that evaluation, according to Payne, Snell remarked that “it was inconvenient and terrible timing for [Payne] to be pregnant.” (Payne Dep. 53.) Payne testified that Snell brought the issue up again at her second evaluation, with Snell telling her not to treat her pregnancy as a disability and asking her how she planned on managing her symptoms better. (Id. at 65.) Snell denied making either remark. (Snell Dep. 65–66.) Nor did Payne report either remark; she testified that her mother, also a WMU

custodial employee, as well as a union representative named Kathy, advised her not to mention Snell’s remarks to HR. (Payne Dep. 55, 66.) Director of labor relations Kurt Graham (Schmidt Dep. 77) approved Payne’s firing after speaking about Payne’s performance with Schmidt and Snell. (Graham Aff. ¶¶ 13–14.) On August 23, Snell, Arnett, and another HR manager conducted Payne’s final evaluation. (Snell Dep. 106.) Snell concluded that Payne’s performance was unsatisfactory in multiple respects. (Final Evaluation, ECF No. 25-18.) Snell testified that her reasons for reaching that conclusion included Payne’s frequent absences and partial days, as well as her sitting down during work hours. (Snell Dep. 106) Arnett’s report about Payne’s nap and her haphazard cleaning factored into Snell’s assessment. (Arnett Dep. 82–83.) Based on Arnett’s feedback, as well as her own observations of Payne’s shortcomings, Snell determined that Payne had failed her probation. (Snell Dep.

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Amber Payne v. Western Michigan University, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amber-payne-v-western-michigan-university-miwd-2025.