Boutin v. Exxon Mobil Corp.

730 F. Supp. 2d 660, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 77095, 2010 WL 3056818
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedJuly 30, 2010
DocketCivil Action H-09-0322
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 730 F. Supp. 2d 660 (Boutin v. Exxon Mobil Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boutin v. Exxon Mobil Corp., 730 F. Supp. 2d 660, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 77095, 2010 WL 3056818 (S.D. Tex. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND OPINION

LEE H. ROSENTHAL, District Judge.

This is an employment discrimination case. The defendants are Jacobs Field Services North America, Inc. and Exxon-Mobil Corporation. The plaintiff, Kimberly Boutin, was an employee of Jacobs Field Services, which had a services contract at an ExxonMobil chemical plant. Boutin alleges that Jacobs and ExxonMobil fired her from her job with Jacobs at the ExxonMobil plant because of her sex and in retaliation for complaining about sexual harassment at work. The defendants deny any discrimination and assert that Jacobs fired Boutin after marijuana was found in her car during a routine search for contraband, which, as a matter of policy, required her to be barred from the plant premises. The defendants have moved for summary judgment. (Docket Entry Nos. 26, 45). Both defendants argue that there is insufficient evidence to create a fact issue on all three of Boutin’s claims. ExxonMobil also argues that it cannot be liable as a matter of law because it was not Boutin’s employer. Boutin has responded to both motions, arguing that the record creates disputed fact issues material to liability and that ExxonMobil and Jacobs were her “joint employers.” (Docket Entry Nos. 43, 47). Both defendants have replied. (Docket Entry Nos. 44, 52). Based on the motions, responses, and replies; the summary judgment record; and the applicable law, this court grants both defendants’ motions for summary judgment. Final judgment is entered by separate order. The reasons are explained in detail below.

I. Background

A. Boutin’s Work for Jacobs

In 2003, Kimberly Boutin began working for Jacobs Field Service North America, a company that contracts to provide services to industrial plants in the Texas Gulf Coast region. One of the plants Jacobs contracted to serve was the Mount Belvieu Plastics Plant (the “MBPP”) owned by the Exxon-Mobil Corporation. The MBPP is a chemical facility that produces polyetheyne. The contract between Jacobs and Exxon-Mobil stated that Jacobs is “an independent contractor controlling and supervising *664 its personnel and equipment used” in performing the contract. (Docket Entry No. 26, Ex. 2, Smith Deck, Ex. A at 2). The contract also stated that ExxonMobil has the right to request that any Jacobs employee be removed from the MBPP for any reason, so long as it is “in compliance with applicable law.” (Id. at 7).

According to Kendra Smith, the Human Resources Manager for ExxonMobil at the MBPP while Boutin worked there, Exxon-Mobil had a written policy prohibiting “possession] of controlled substances” in the workplace. (Id., Ex. 2, Smith Deck, ¶ 11). She stated that ExxonMobil also required its “contractors to implement their own contraband policies.” (Id., ¶ 10). Indeed, ExxonMobil gave contractors specific minimum requirements for these policies. Contractors were required to prohibit their personnel from, among other things:

A. Using, possessing, selling, manufacturing, distributing, concealing, or transporting while on or handling ExxonMobil Property or during performance of Third-Party Services any of the following items:

i. Any Prohibited Substance including full or empty alcoholic beverage containers;
ii. Contraband, including firearms, ammunition, explosives, weapons and cameras (with or without film);
in. Illicit drug equipment or paraphernalia

(Id., Ex. 2, Smith Deck, Ex. D). The written policy also stated that ExxonMobil may conduct searches of a contractor’s employees’ property or persons at any time, including with scent-trained dogs. (Id.). “Any Contractor Personnel found in violation of Contractor’s Policy or who refuses to cooperate with the searches and tests included in Contractor’s Policy shall be permanently removed by Contractor from ExxonMobil Property and from performing work for ExxonMobil.” (Id.). ExxonMobil also developed and documented a standardized set of actions it would take in the event that a contractor’s employee was found to have violated any premises rules. (Id., Ex. 2, ¶ 11). This document stated that if a contractor’s employee was found to be in possession of illegal drugs, he or she would be denied “future access to all ExxonMobil sites” after only one such incident. (Id., Ex. 2, Smith Deck, Ex. E at 2). This zero-tolerance approach was in contrast to other violations, which were addressed with progressive discipline. An employee found to have a firearm or ammunition would be denied access to all ExxonMobil sites for three workdays on the first infraction and denied access permanently on the second infraction. (Id. at 4).

Jacobs had its own written policies and disciplinary guidelines. Drug possession “on company premises” would result in discharge upon the first offense, as would “[possession of illegal weapons or firearms on company premises.” (Docket Entry No. 47, Ex. 20).

It is undisputed that Boutin was subject to the ExxonMobil contractor policies while working at the MBPP. Jacobs disputes that its own policies applied because the MBPP was not Jacobs’s “premises.”

Boutin began working at the MBPP in the Packaging and Shipping Department, where she held two different positions. (Docket Entry No. 45, Ex. 6, Pettus Deck, ¶ 4; Docket Entry No. 47, Ex. 3, Boutin Depo. at 23). In late 2006, Boutin applied for the Catalyst Yardmaster job in the MBPP’s Catalyst Unit. Tom Pettus, Jacobs’s on-site manager at the MBPP, and Kris Fields, ExxonMobil’s “first line supervisor,” interviewed and selected Boutin for the position. Pettus stated that it was his decision. Boutin testified in her depo *665 sition that Pettus told her that he decided to hire her for the job in consultation with Fields. Pettus recalled that there were “approximately” five other applicants for the position, four of whom were men. The previous Catalyst Yardmaster was a man. (Docket Entry No. 45, Ex. 6, Pettus Deck, ¶ 5; Docket Entry No. 47, Ex. 3, Boutin Depo. at 24-25).

Jacobs was Boutin’s employer for all three of the positions she held at the MBPP. ExxonMobil did not issue her paychecks, pay payroll taxes for her employment, or provide her any benefits. Boutin worked a different schedule than Exxon-Mobil employees and had different vacation allocations. (Docket Entry No. 26, Ex. 2, Smith Deck, ¶ 4; Ex. 1, Boutin Depo. at 96, 131-33). ExxonMobil did have some supervisory role in Boutin’s work. Although Boutin’s vacation requests were signed by Jacobs personnel, she testified in her deposition that she would also have to clear her chosen vacation dates with ExxonMobil because “[i]n catalyst, you don’t have a backup.” (Id., Ex. 1, Boutin Depo. at 139-40).

B. Boutin’s Allegations of Sexual Harassment

Boutin began working as Catalyst Yardmaster in October 2006. That same month, she began having problems with an ExxonMobil employee, George Dorsey. Boutin claims that when Dorsey gave her a tour of the Catalyst Department, he told her that she was required to perform duties that she felt were outside her job description.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
730 F. Supp. 2d 660, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 77095, 2010 WL 3056818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boutin-v-exxon-mobil-corp-txsd-2010.