Ashley Weston v. Tyson Shared Services, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 19, 2026
Docket5:24-cv-05050
StatusUnknown

This text of Ashley Weston v. Tyson Shared Services, Inc. (Ashley Weston v. Tyson Shared Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashley Weston v. Tyson Shared Services, Inc., (W.D. Ark. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS FAYETTEVILLE DIVISION

ASHLEY WESTON PLAINTIFF

V. CASE NO. 5:24-CV-5050

TYSON SHARED SERVICES, INC. DEFENDANT

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

TABLE OF CONTENTS I. FACTS ........................................................................................................................ 2 II. LEGAL STANDARD ................................................................................................ 14 III. DISCUSSION .......................................................................................................... 15 A. FMLA Discrimination/Retaliation ...................................................................... 16 B. EPA Violation ...................................................................................................... 22 C. ACRA Retaliation ................................................................................................ 24

Plaintiff Ashley Weston sued Defendant Tyson Shared Services, Inc. for violating the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”), the Equal Pay Act (“EPA”), and the Arkansas Civil Rights Act (“ACRA”) following the termination of her employment with Tyson. Now before the Court is Tyson’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 43).1 For the reasons that follow, the Motion is GRANTED and the case is, accordingly, DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.

1 The Court has reviewed both parties’ Statements of Fact (Docs. 44 & 52), Ms. Weston’s Response in Opposition (Doc. 51), both parties’ briefs in support of their respective positions (Docs. 45 & 53), Tyson’s Reply (Doc. 59), and a number of sealed documents filed by the parties (Docs. 50 & 56). I. FACTS Ashley Weston has spent much of her career at Tyson. After some years working on the production side, she joined Tyson’s corporate office in 2020. (Doc. 44, ¶¶ 1–2). In early 2023, Ms. Weston’s role was “reclassified” from “Manager of Training and Development” to “Tier 2 Team Lead Learning.” Id. ¶ 3. Tyson asserts that this change

“expand[ed] [Ms. Weston’s] training responsibilities and increase[ed] the job’s demands.” Id. Ms. Weston asserts that this was “mainly a change in title,” but she testified that the change came with “more responsibilities” and more time at work. (Doc. 52, ¶ 3.A; Doc. 43-1, pp. 29:22–30:2 (Weston Depo.)).2 Ms. Weston was a Team Lead in the Poultry Group and “supported training and development for employees” at Tyson’s raw poultry facilities. (Doc. 44, ¶¶ 4–5). There were equivalent Team Lead positions for Tyson’s other business units, e.g., the Beef Group. (Doc. 44, ¶ 6). After the reclassification, Ms. Weston was one of eight Tier 2 Team Leads, three of whom served the Poultry Group while the other five served other business units.3

Prior to the events giving rise to this litigation, Ms. Weston had no disciplinary history at Tyson. (Doc. 52, ¶ 1.B). In July 2023, Tyson added an additional layer to the reporting structure, inserting Eric O’Cain between the Tier 2 Team Leads and the Poultry Group’s prior boss, Stephen King. (Doc. 44, ¶ 10; Doc. 52, ¶ 8.A). Ms. Weston had “no

2 Where documents (like Ms. Weston’s deposition) are internally numbered, pincites reference those internal page numbers.

3 The three Poultry Group Team Leads were Ms. Weston, Charley Christianson, and Vanessa Davis. The Team Leads for other business units were Suzie Rodriguez, Hannah Briggs, Curtis Boone, Aaron Butler, and Nathan Meyer. issues” working under Mr. King but had mixed feelings about the prospect of working under Mr. O’Cain. (Doc. 44, ¶ 9; Doc. 52, ¶ 12). Around this time, Ms. Weston was experiencing a serious medical issue that she learned would require surgery. (Doc. 44, ¶ 13; Doc. 52, ¶ 14.A). She told both Mr. King

and Mr. O’Cain that she was experiencing this issue. (Doc. 44, ¶ 13; Doc. 51-70, p. 2). On Friday, July 21, 2023, Ms. Weston initiated a request for leave with Tyson’s third-party leave administrator, Sedgwick, and informed Mr. O’Cain that she had done so. (Id. ¶ 16; Doc. 52, ¶ 16.A). In Ms. Weston’s case, Sedgwick would provide only after-the-fact approval for leave. See Doc. 43-7, p. 1 (“Your Time Away Begins: August 10, 2023”; “Your completed documentation is due on August 25, 2023.”). Therefore, Mr. O’Cain acted as “the gatekeeper” for whether Ms. Weston could take leave before Sedgwick had formally approved it. (Doc. 51-6, pp. 62:20–63:10 (Weston Depo.)). The same day Ms. Weston filed her request for leave, Mr. O’Cain sent Ms. Weston a to-do list as “feedback” in her Workday account. (Doc. 51-21, p. 3). Ms. Weston interpreted this as Mr. O’Cain “clearly

trying to begin his paper trail for—either for [her] performance review or for [her] employment.” (Doc. 51-6, p. 55:13–17). On July 26 or 27, Ms. Weston initiated a new request with Sedgwick for reduced- schedule leave backdated to July 24. (Doc. 43-7, p. 2; Doc. 51-70, p. 2). On August 1, Mr. O’Cain emailed a human resources representative about creating a counseling statement for Ms. Weston because of tasks she had failed to complete the prior week. (Doc. 51-17). The next day, August 2, Mr. O’Cain texted Ms. Weston requesting she provide a “half day schedule.” (Doc. 51-70, p. 2). Ms. Weston responded, “It’s difficult to determine a 4 hour schedule because I can’t predict times that I will be severely ill or in a lot of pain,” but Mr. O’Cain again asked her to “create a half day schedule so I will know when you’re scheduled to work.” Id. After this exchange, Mr. O’Cain again left feedback, this time public, on Ms. Weston’s Workday account describing “some of the challenges we’ve faced,” listing two

“examples” of tasks Ms. Weston had failed to complete—the same tasks described in his email to HR the day before. (Doc. 51-21). The comment also listed expectations like “only prioritize items you think you can do within the 4 hour block” and “If you cannot complete an item on time, please state that when the deadline is established.” Id. It concluded with “Let’s meet later today, as you requested. Then, I would like to reduce your schedule, discuss a coverage plan, and discuss the above examples.” Id. Ultimately, Ms. Weston began full medical leave that day. (Doc. 44, ¶ 18). She asserts that she was supposed to be on reduced-schedule leave beginning July 21 but Mr. O’Cain “would not allow her to work a reduced schedule.” (Doc. 52, ¶ 19.A). Sedgwick retroactively approved her leave after it began. (Doc. 43-7, pp. 4, 6–7).

Ms. Weston “underwent surgery on August 10 and returned to work on September 5.” (Doc. 44, ¶ 20). Sometime before or immediately after her leave, Ms. Weston accessed compensation information about her peers via Workday. (Doc. 51-1, pp. 14:3– 10, 15:10–16, 16:2–5 (Bell Depo.)). After a technology change earlier in the year, HR employees like Ms. Weston had increased access to information about other Tyson employees in Workday. Id. at p. 14:3–10. She had told Mr. King, back when he was her boss, that she had too much access, namely that she could see other employees’ social security numbers, but nothing was done to restrict her access. (Doc. 51-4, pp. 22:24–23:9 (King Depo.)). Ms. Weston says she was prompted to look at the compensation information because she was told by a recruiter that there was a wide pay gap amongst her Tier 2 peers. (Doc. 51-6, p. 71:2–10 (Weston Depo.)). Indeed, she looked in Workday and found that Suzie Rodriguez and Charley Christianson were making about $30,000 more in base

salary than she was. Id. p. 75:4–8. She also learned that two of her male coworkers had been given $10,000 stock bonuses in 2022; at that time, Ms. Weston had three peers in the Poultry Group. Both of the men got bonuses, while Ms. Weston and the other woman did not. Id. at p. 76:9–24. Mr.

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Ashley Weston v. Tyson Shared Services, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashley-weston-v-tyson-shared-services-inc-arwd-2026.