Ayres v. Weatherford U.S., LP

139 F. Supp. 3d 861, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 132794, 2015 WL 5738492
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedSeptember 30, 2015
DocketCase No. 4:13CV600
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 139 F. Supp. 3d 861 (Ayres v. Weatherford U.S., LP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ayres v. Weatherford U.S., LP, 139 F. Supp. 3d 861, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 132794, 2015 WL 5738492 (N.D. Ohio 2015).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

JOHN R-. ADAMS, UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

This matter is before the Court upon a motion for summary judgment (Doc. 19) filed by Defendant Weatherford U.S., LP “Weatherford.” For the reasons stated herein, Defendant’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED.

I. Facts

The basic facts relative to the location, nature, and duration of Plaintiffs employment by Defendant are undisputed. In April of 2012, Plaintiff; Daniel A. Ayres, learned through a friend, that Defendant, “one of the largest drilling and mining operators in the world,” was hiring for its fracing operations in North Dakota. Defendant, Weatherford, is a Louisiana limited partnership and one of the largest global providers of oil and natural gas well drilling equipment and services. (Deck of Crabb at ¶ 2). Weatherford has fracing operations in multiple states, including Texas and North Dakota. Ayres, who lives in Poland, Ohio, began his employment with Weatherford in April 2012, when he traveled at Defendant’s expense to Denver, Colorado for one week of training. After completing Weatherford’s entry level driver training in Denver, Ayres worked in Texarkana, Texas briefly before he was transferred to Williston, North Dakota in early July 2012.

Ayres’s worksite was Williston from July until he was terminated on October 19, 2012. Ayres’s work schedule was intended to be three weeks on at the work site, two weeks off. (Ayres Deposition, 45 — 47.) Weatherford paid for Ayres to fly back to Ohio, and paid him full time for all five weeks, both at the work site and at home. Ayres admits that he never worked for Weatherford in Ohio, that his supervisors were not based in Ohio, and that Weatherford did not control where he lived or spent his two weeks off. When Ayres arrived in Williston, he initially worked six straight weeks, instead of the intended three on two off schedule. After this six week stretch, Ayres was sent home to Ohio on paid leave. Ayres remained in Ohio, on paid leave, until he was laid off in October.

Weatherford states that Ayres was let go as part, of a general reduction in force in Williston. According ,to Weatherford, in 2012 fracing operations in Williston were [864]*864in beginning stages, there as a significant downturn in work in late, summer/early fall 2012 because several contracts fell apart, while others were pushed back. . When Ayres was moved to Williston, apparently due to the downturn in contact work, instead of. primarily operating DOT regulated vehicles, his time was spent training, driving equipment, working on equipment, and performing security services. (Ayres Deposition, 67-69.) The Williston operation was instructed to cut costs. Ayres one of sixteen individuals terminated at the Williston site, the group included fourteen individuals who, like Ayres, were identified as equipment operators, as well as one listed as a driver. The equipment operators let go from the Williston site are classed I, II, and III — Ayres is listed as an Equipment Operator II — he is one of five Equipment Operator II émployees of the fourteen Equipment Operators who were terminated from the Williston site. Ayres concedes that he was aware others were let" go when he was. (Ayres Deposition, 111.)' Weatherford states that the reduction in force was carried out'by the' same district manager who hired Ayres, Terry Crabb, who explained that he asked each supervisor to identify essential ■ equipment operators for a reduced force, and Ayers was not identified as essential. (Crabb Depogtion, ‘34 and 40.) Crabb stated during his deposition that he asked human resources whether another work site was available for Ayres, No offer appears to have been forthcoming as a result of this inquiry.

According to Ayres’s deposition the training the received in Denver included instruction on his duty to verify that all assignments given him are within his qualifications as a driver and that if the assignment is outside his qualifications he could refuse to perform it without retaliation. (Ayres Deposition, 62, Exhibit 9.) Ayres was also aware that Weatherford has an anonymous hotline for the reporting of workplace issues and a company policy prohibiting retaliation for reporting. (Ayres Deposition, 61-62.). Ayres himself first reported a workplace issue to his supervisor in Texarkana, according to his deposition he was satisfied with how his report was handled, and the incident is not part of this suit. (Ayres Deposition, 62-66.)

While in Williston Ayres was also involved in the complaints of andther employee, Jeff Pittman, who complained that Terry Crabb, the district manager, was ignoring him, the -conditions of the man camps1, were poor, and-that drivers were being asked to carry loads in violation of DOT regulations. (Ayres Depostion, 76-80, 93-95.) Ayres involvement appears to have been as a willing participant in the Human Resources investigation of the complaints. Jeff Pittman, the employee vyho made the complaints , that resulted in the Human Resources investigation in Wil-liston, was not let go as part of the reduction in force, he was transferred to Vernal, Utah, per his request. (Ayres Deposition, 124-125.) Ayres states that although Pittman was transferred as he requested, he later chose to end his employment with Weatherford for another offer.

Ayres alleges that after the Pittman complaints, he raised multiple issues with his supervisors and with the Regional Human Resources Manager, James Nicholson. According to Ayres he expressed concern that drivers were being asked to carry loads in violation of DOT regula[865]*865tions, he himself had been asked to carry loads outside his qualifications, individuals were operating company vehicles while drinking, and that his time sheets were altered to remove twenty-seven hours of overtime he actually worked. Ayres concedes that the twenty-seven hours were restored and he was paid in full for the time. (Ayres Deposition, 129, 131.) Weatherford notes that there are no entries in Ayres’s driving log concerning the alleged violation of DOT regulations, Ayres states that he said he was not.certified to carry the loads and another driver was found. (Ayres Deposition, 93-95.)

Ayres states that he informed his supervisor and Crabb about the load violations, informed Crabb about the timesheet violations (Crabb was responsible for the alteration, which were corrected after a Human Resources review). Ayres further states that when he was unable to reach local human resources representatives, he contacted the regional head of human resources, James Nicholson, and informed him of the DOT violations, drinking, time sheet altering, and ,of statements made by Terry Crabb, that anyone who complained to.HR would be fired. (Ayres Deposition, 105.) Nicholson recalls speaking with Ayres via telephone but does not recall all of the specifics of the conversation, .apart from discussing a Weatherford- shuttle to the airport. According to Nicholson, Ayres and a supervisor were on the same shuttle, separate from many of Ayers’s colleagues, because there was not enough room on a single shuttle. (Nicholson Deposition,. 31-33.) Ayres cites this trip to the airport as evidence that he had been singled out for retaliation and deliberately separated from his qolleagues. When other members of his team were called back to Williston .on September 5, 2012, Ayres was not recalled.

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Related

Weatherford U.S., L.P. v. U.S. Dep't of Labor
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 F. Supp. 3d 861, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 132794, 2015 WL 5738492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayres-v-weatherford-us-lp-ohnd-2015.