Benjamin L. Floyd v. Federal Express Corporation

423 F. App'x 924
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedApril 19, 2011
Docket10-12463
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 423 F. App'x 924 (Benjamin L. Floyd v. Federal Express Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benjamin L. Floyd v. Federal Express Corporation, 423 F. App'x 924 (11th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Benjamin L. Floyd appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to defendant Federal Express Corporation (“FedEx”), his former employer, in his action alleging race discrimination, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1981 and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”), as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e. After review, we affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

We summarize the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.

A. Floyd’s Employment

Plaintiff Ben Floyd is a black male who, at the time of his termination, worked part-time for defendant FedEx on the evening shift. He also worked as a security police officer for the Department of the Army at Redstone Arsenal. At FedEx, Floyd was classified as a “courier,” but actually worked as a courier only on Mondays. On Tuesdays through Fridays he worked as a “handler.” His schedule, which allowed him to start work at FedEx later on Tuesdays through Fridays, was an accommodation for his day job as a security police officer. The courier position is a higher pay grade than the handler posi *926 tion. Floyd continued to be paid as a courier even after he began working as a handler for four out of the five workdays of the week.

At FedEx, Floyd’s immediate supervisor was Scott Hurst, an Operations Manager on the evening shift. Hurst’s supervisor was Gary Wade, Senior Manager of Station Operations. Wade reported to Jeffrey Walker, Managing Director of the Delta District, which included north Alabama. Hurst, Wade, and Walker are white.

B. Sweeping Trucks

Floyd and other part-time black handlers were assigned the duty of sweeping 80 FedEx trucks over the course of the week. Floyd, as well as David McNair, Altrice Harris, and O’Shaughnessy Allen, who were all black, part-time handlers on the evening shift, were assigned to sweep the trucks. FedEx assigned the extra duties in order to give each handler sufficient work to fulfill the minimum required hours, which, for a part-time employee, is 17 1/2 hours.

Kevin Bowers, a white part-time handler on the evening shift, was not required to sweep trucks. However, Bowers performed other additional duties related to hazardous materials, and therefore had enough work to fill his mandatory 17 1/2 hours. Another white handler on the evening shift was not assigned to sweep trucks. She was assigned to complete customs paperwork for international shipments.

On April 20, 2006, plaintiff Floyd gave a written statement to FedEx in support of Kelly Deloney, a black employee who had complained that FedEx required her to work more hours than other employees on light duty because she was pregnant. Floyd’s statement read, “During the months of October through January 2004 to 2005 I was on TRW [light work duty under FedEx’s Temporary Return to Work policy] and was only allowed to work 2-3 hours per night.” Floyd later testified that the first time FedEx required him to clean out trucks was shortly after he gave this statement in support of Deloney. 1

At some point, plaintiff Floyd complained to Hurst about black employees being assigned the duty of cleaning out the trucks. Floyd told Hurst that “Rita [Howard] said that Gary [Wade] was trying to get rid of the black people.” Floyd later testified that he heard Howard, a black manager, as well as Scott Hurst, say that Gary Wade had said he “was trying to fire all the black people.” 2

On a couple of occasions, plaintiff Floyd also complained about cleaning the trucks to Judy Parker, an employee in FedEx’s Human Resources Department. Floyd told Parker that he had heard from both Rita Howard and Scott Hurst that “Wade said that he was trying to fire the black people.”

*927 C. Floyd and Bowers Incident

On the evening of August 31, 2006, Bowers, a white handler, saw David McNair, a black handler, loading a container onto the trailer of an eighteen-wheeler truck. According to plaintiff Floyd’s testimony, Bowers assumed that McNair needed help. Bowers saw McNair struggling with the can while trying to push it into the truck.

Bowers left his work station and went to help McNair. As Bowers passed plaintiff Floyd, he called Floyd a “sorry motherfucker” and told him he was “lazy.” Bowers did not use any racial epithets. Bowers proceeded to the truck and helped McNair push the can into the truck. Plaintiff Floyd testified that he also helped McNair push the can into the truck. 3 Because the can was one of the first cans loaded onto the truck, it was pushed deep into the trailer.

Plaintiff Floyd testified that Bowers pointed his finger at Floyd while they were inside the trailer, so close that if Floyd had not stepped back, “he would have put his hand in my face.” Floyd pushed Bowers’s hand out of his face. At that point, McNair grabbed Bowers. Floyd testified that he did not take a swing at Bowers and that Bowers did not throw a punch at Floyd.

Several other employees witnessed the incident between Bowers and Floyd, including Altrice Harris, Sheyla Abston, and Dennis Mitchell. Harris, Abston, and Mitchell are all black. Only plaintiff Floyd, Bowers, and McNair were inside the truck during the incident.

That night, Bowers reported the incident to Hurst. Bowers told Hurst that Floyd had taken “a swing at him and grazed his chin, [and] hit him in the arm. And then David McNair broke it up and walked [Floyd] out of the trailer.” That night, Hurst interviewed Floyd, Bowers, McNair, Harris, and Abston. Hurst’s interview notes did not mention any physical contact between plaintiff Floyd and Bowers; however, Hurst noted that McNair told him that plaintiff Floyd “took a swing at” Bowers. McNair later testified that he had not seen any physical contact between Bowers and Floyd, but he did see Floyd take a swing at Bowers. McNair did not know whether Floyd made physical contact.

According to Hurst’s interview notes, Floyd told Hurst that Bowers had asked Floyd why was his “sorry ass” not helping McNair and that Floyd had followed Bowers, saying, “[You’re] not my boss.” Harris told Hurst that Floyd and Bowers “cussed each other out but no punches, no [gestures, [and] no fighting.” In a followup statement, Harris told Hurst that she had seen Floyd and Bowers arguing and that McNair “was in [the] middle.”

That same night and the following day, Hurst received written statements from Floyd, Bowers, McNair, Harris, and Ab-ston. None of the written statements explicitly stated that Floyd hit Bowers, although both McNair and Bowers stated that Floyd had taken a “swing” at, or attempted to hit, Bowers. Floyd’s statement indicated that during the confrontation, Bowers told him he was “lazy” and “I told him that [Bowers] was not my boss and I don’t need to hear his shit.

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423 F. App'x 924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benjamin-l-floyd-v-federal-express-corporation-ca11-2011.