Ashley v. Federal Express Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedMarch 17, 2023
Docket3:21-cv-00068
StatusUnknown

This text of Ashley v. Federal Express Corporation (Ashley v. Federal Express Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashley v. Federal Express Corporation, (D. Alaska 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF ALASKA

ELZBIETA ASHLEY, Plaintiff, v. FEDERAL EXPRESS Case No. 3:21-cv-00068-SLG CORPORATION, Defendant. ORDER REGARDING MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT Plaintiff Elzbieta Ashley initiated this action against her former employer,

Federal Express Corporation (“FedEx”), in Alaska Superior Court in December 2020.1 Ms. Ashley seeks damages for retaliation and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.2 FedEx removed the action to federal court on March 24, 2021.3 Before the Court is FedEx’s motion for summary judgment.4 The Court heard oral argument on the motion on October 19, 2022.5

1 3AN-20-09639CI Ashley, Elzbieta vs. Federal Express Corp PRR, CourtView Public Access Website Alaska Court System, https://records.courts.alaska.gov/eaccess (click “search cases”; enter “3AN-20-09639CI”; click “search”; and then click either link under “Case Number” heading) (last modified Mar. 24, 2021). Ms. Ashley filed an amended complaint in state court on February 24, 2021. Docket 8 at 3-10 (Am. Compl.). 2 Docket 8 at 7-10 ¶¶ 21-29 (Am. Compl.). 3 Docket 1 (Notice of Removal). 4 Docket 21 (Mot. Summ. J.). 5 Docket 33 (Min. Entry). BACKGROUND This case concerns an employment dispute arising from events occurring in the years preceding Ms. Ashley’s retirement from FedEx in December 2018.

Although the parties dispute some of the details concerning these events, the majority of the facts relevant to the Court’s disposition of the instant motion appear to be undisputed.6 In October 1998, Ms. Ashley began working for FedEx in Anchorage, Alaska, as a part-time “checker/sorter” who loaded airplanes.7 Ms. Ashley suffered

an injury at work in December 2000 that limited her to carrying no more than ten pounds at a time.8 As a result of this medical restriction, Ms. Ashley accepted a new position at FedEx in June 2005 as a part-time operations agent, a role in which she processed employee timecards.9 Holding this position until her retirement in December 2018, Ms. Ashley often shared timecard-processing duties with other

6 The Court relies primarily on the factual allegations set forth in Ms. Ashley’s amended complaint at Docket 8; Ms. Ashley’s affidavit in support of her opposition to FedEx’s summary judgment motion at Docket 28-1; the excerpts of deposition testimony from Ms. Ashley and her former supervisor, George Kendall, to which the parties cite in their briefing (Ms. Ashley filed the complete deposition transcripts at Docket 34-1 and Docket 34-2, respectively); and the 33 exhibits FedEx submitted in support of its summary judgment motion at Docket 21-2. FedEx’s exhibits at Docket 21-2 include materials in Ms. Ashley’s FedEx personnel file, materials related to a complaint Ms. Ashley filed against FedEx with the Alaska State Commission for Human Rights, deposition excerpts, and FedEx corporate policies and agreements. 7 Docket 28-1 at 1-2 ¶¶ 3, 7 (Ashley Aff.). 8 Docket 28-1 at 2 ¶ 7. 9 Docket 28-1 at 2 ¶ 7. Case No. 3:21-cv-00068-SLG, Ashley v. Fed. Express Corp. operations agents.10 She describes herself as “a successful, highly praised, well- regarded, and valued employee.”11 Ms. Ashley reports that her experience working for FedEx was positive until

2014 or 2015 when a new manager, George Kendall, began supervising her.12 Under Mr. Kendall’s supervision, Ms. Ashley alleges that she faced “hostility in the workplace, harassment and discrimination.”13 She attributes some of this hostility to Mr. Kendall’s own actions, including his allegedly “making frequent comments about [Ms. Ashley’s] age, medical conditions, and physical limitations resulting

from her on-the-job injuries, and . . . making false accusations against her.”14 Ms. Ashley also asserts that Mr. Kendall favored her younger colleagues at her expense by changing her work schedule without consideration of her preferences and non-work obligations.15 Ms. Ashley further alleges that FedEx tolerated “discrimination and taunting” from her peers in the form of disrespectful statements

targeting her status as a foreign-born American who speaks English as a second language.16

10 Docket 28-1 at 1 ¶ 3, 3-5 ¶¶ 11-20. 11 Docket 8 at 4 ¶ 4 (Am. Compl.). 12 Docket 28-1 at 2 ¶ 8. 13 Docket 8 at 4 ¶ 8 (Am. Compl.). 14 Docket 8 at 5 ¶ 9 (Am. Compl.). 15 Docket 8 at 5 ¶¶ 11-12 (Am. Compl.). 16 See Docket 8 at 5 ¶ 10 (Am. Compl.) (alleging that one of Ms. Ashley’s peers greeted her with Case No. 3:21-cv-00068-SLG, Ashley v. Fed. Express Corp. Ms. Ashley’s personnel file corroborates the change she describes in her relationship with FedEx after Mr. Kendall became her supervisor. That file identifies only a handful of minor issues from 2011 through early 2015 related to

attendance, punctuality, and working excess hours.17 In September 2015, however, Ms. Ashley received the first in a series of disciplinary actions, warnings, or “documented counselings” related to her “conduct.”18 Then, on April 26, 2017, FedEx placed Ms. Ashley “on suspension with pay pending investigation of potential violation of the Acceptable Conduct Policy P2-5.”19 A subsequent

warning letter, dated May 1, 2017, described “multiple” instances in which Ms. Ashley’s “behavior was disruptive,” finding that she “initiated conversations

the phrase, “Hello, Mafia!” and another repeatedly asked her when she would “return to China”). 17 Docket 21-2 at 125-29 (Ashley Personnel R.). 18 Docket 21-2 at 125-26 (Ashley Personnel R.). Ms. Ashley’s personnel file includes two records from 2015 reflecting such documented counselings, one dated September 12, 2015 and the other dated September 15, 2015, in which Ms. Ashley received copies of policies concerning acceptable employee conduct, compliance and business conduct, and a “Workplace Violence Prevention Program-Acknowledgment Form.” Docket 21-2 at 124-26 (Ashley Personnel R.). No other information about these records is provided, and they were not a focus of the parties’ briefing or deposition testimony. 19 Docket 21-2 at 31 (April 26, 2017 Inter-office Mem. re Investigative Suspension with Pay). FedEx’s Acceptable Conduct Policy P2-5 establishes FedEx’s expectation that its employees will “demonstrate the highest degree of integrity, responsibility, and professional conduct at all times.” Docket 21-2 at 21 (FedEx Acceptable Conduct Policy). Among other things, the policy establishes conduct-related expectations, describes prohibited behavior, defines “misconduct,” and memorializes the internal procedures FedEx follows in investigating and responding to alleged violations of the policy and disciplining employees. Docket 21-2 at 21-29 (FedEx Acceptable Conduct Policy). Case No. 3:21-cv-00068-SLG, Ashley v. Fed. Express Corp. multiple times regarding another employee’s previous conduct” and “spent time on the clock talking on the phone to a co-worker who was not at work.”20 In response to the paid suspension and warning letter, Ms. Ashley filed a

complaint with the Alaska State Commission for Human Rights (the “ASCHR”) on May 30, 2017, alleging that FedEx discriminated against her on the basis of her age and national origin and retaliated against her for complaining about the workplace harassment and discrimination she faced.21 Before the ASCHR responded to Ms. Ashley’s complaint with a final decision, FedEx again placed Ms.

Ashley on investigative suspension with pay on January 22, 2018 after one of her colleagues, fellow operations agent Lyle Turner, complained that Ms. Ashley “created a hostile work environment.”22 An investigation from FedEx management into Mr. Turner’s allegations concluded: Turner and Ashley started having problems when Turner turned in a security officer for using his phone in the training room. Ashley did not approve of this and told him he was no angel because he was doing his school work while at work.

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Ashley v. Federal Express Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashley-v-federal-express-corporation-akd-2023.