Barbara Gambill v. Duke Energy Corporation

456 F. App'x 578
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 25, 2012
Docket10-3333
StatusUnpublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 456 F. App'x 578 (Barbara Gambill v. Duke Energy Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barbara Gambill v. Duke Energy Corporation, 456 F. App'x 578 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Following the 2005 merger between Cin-ergy Corp. and defendant Duke Energy Corporation, plaintiffs Barbara Gambill and Eric French were terminated during a reduction in force. Gambill and French, who were both over fifty years old at the time of their discharge, allege that Duke terminated them because of their age, in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. § 621, et seq. 1 French further alleges that Duke retaliated against him for taking leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), 29 U.S.C. § 2612(a)(1)(D), and interfered with his receipt of early retirement benefits, in violation of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1140. 2 The district court granted Duke’s motion for summary judgment, dismissing all of plaintiffs’ claims, and plaintiffs appealed. This was proper because plaintiffs have not demonstrated a genuine issue of fact that Duke’s explanation for its actions was pretextual, that there was a causal connection between French’s termination and his FMLA leave, or that Duke interfered with French’s retirement benefits.

I.

Gambill and French both worked in Cin-ergy’s pre-merger legal department. Gambill began practicing law in 1985 and joined Cinergy in 1990. 3 She focused on environmental law and assumed the position of Senior Counsel in 1996, a position she held until her termination. French began working at Cinergy in 1977, and joined the legal department in 1999 as a general litigator after obtaining his law degree.

Three years before the Duke-Cinergy merger, Marc Manly became Cinergy’s General Counsel; he then hired Catherine Stempien to head the litigation and environmental sections. Upon her arrival, Stempien allegedly excluded Gambill from various projects and meetings. For example, Gambill testified that she was assigned no role on a number of environmental suits, was not allowed to speak at section meetings, stopped receiving legal updates from the environmental group, and was excluded from team building activities at a legal department retreat.

*581 Further, Stempien and others at Ciner-gy allegedly made remarks that reflected a negative opinion regarding older employees. Stempien called French an “old-timer” and noted his graying beard. Stem-pien also made comparisons between the performance ability of younger and older employees, which included stereotypical assessments of Gambill’s technological competence and willingness to learn. The comments were infrequent and occurred over a number of years.

Before the merger, French took leave to address various medical problems. In 2004, French missed approximately three weeks for back surgery. When French offered to return early from his FMLA leave, Stempien said “you can’t come back to work, you’re falling apart.” When French did return in September 2004, French testified he had a “feeling” that Stempien’s behavior had changed towards him. French testified that Stempien would “dump” work on him, showed greater interest in his whereabouts during the work day, and began closing her door when speaking with other attorneys. During the same period, French provided care for his mentally retarded brother and his father, who was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.

In May 2005, Duke and Cinergy announced their merger effective April 3, 2006. Shortly thereafter, a combined Duke-Cinergy integration team began evaluating staffing levels for the merged company. Stempien and a Duke employee, Paul Newton, co-chaired the legal department’s integration team. They recommended that Duke create a new position entitled Environmental Health & Safety Counsel Midwest, which combined environmental legal work with health and safety legal work. The team also recommended that Duke eliminate French’s general litigator position, and reassign the matters he handled — such as foreclosures and small bankruptcies — to paralegals who would be assisted by outside counsel. These changes aligned the new legal department with Duke’s prior organizational structure.

On January 18, 2006, Manly circulated a preliminary memorandum indicating that Duke planned to downsize the legal department by twelve attorneys and offering employees the opportunity to resign voluntarily with severance pay. The memo qualified that this staffing level was preliminary and that Duke expected “revisions to the design and staffing numbers as we develop a better understanding of our clients’ organizations.” It also listed “a number of criteria” that the integration team would use to select individuals for the new legal department: “performance evaluations,” “ability to collaborate and work well with other lawyers and staff,” “ability to communicate well with clients and build team consensus,” and “subject matter expertise.” In the combined legal departments, 13 attorneys voluntarily resigned, including four Cinergy attorneys and nine Duke attorneys. The option to voluntarily resign closed February 21, 2006, and neither Gambill nor French took the option.

Duke also allowed qualifying employees to opt for an early retirement pension enhancement under the Cinergy Corp. Non-Union Employees’ Pension Plan. If an employee had attained the age of 52, was vested, and satisfied the Plan’s “Rule of 85” — which required an employee’s age and years of service to total 85 — he could qualify for early retirement. As part of the merger, Duke relaxed the Rule of 85 standard, granting an additional three points for age and three points for service. French requested that the company grant him additional points or change the formula by which points were allocated, apportioning four points to age and two points to *582 service. Duke was advised by counsel that it could not lawfully honor that request.

Following the close of the voluntary resignation window, Manly, Stempien and Newton began making personnel decisions. The team identified two candidates for the newly created EH&S Counsel Midwest position: Julie Ezell and Gambill. Ezell had joined Cinergy in 2000, after eight years of work in private practice. Starting in 2002, Ezell managed the largest litigation then affecting the company, litigation that involved the New Source Review (NSR), a permit process created by Congress as part of the Clean Air Act. A number of Duke employees believed that Ezell’s NSR-based experience was of immediate and critical importance to the company.

As part of their decision, the integration team considered the performance reviews of both Ezell and Gambill. The team believed that in every performance year in which Ezell and Gambill were both reviewed, Ezell’s performance rating was better than Gambill’s. These annual performance evaluations included feedback from internal client contacts as well as peer reviews. Gambill’s 2005 review did not include input from one of her primary internal clients, Debra Nispel, but did include input from another client, Bernard Huff.

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Bluebook (online)
456 F. App'x 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbara-gambill-v-duke-energy-corporation-ca6-2012.