Brown v. Cherokee Nitrogen LLC

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedAugust 9, 2023
Docket3:21-cv-01491
StatusUnknown

This text of Brown v. Cherokee Nitrogen LLC (Brown v. Cherokee Nitrogen LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Cherokee Nitrogen LLC, (N.D. Ala. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA NORTHWESTERN DIVISION JUSTIN BROWN, § § Plaintiff, § § v. § Case No. 3:21-cv-1491-LCB § CHEROKEE NITROGEN, LLC, § § Defendant. §

OPINION & ORDER Plaintiff Justin Brown seeks injunctive relief and damages in this civil rights lawsuit against his former employer, Cherokee Nitrogen LLC, for purported violations of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.; the Civil Rights Act of 1866, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 1981; the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12131 et seq.; and the Family and Medical Leave Act, 29 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq. In sum, Brown alleges that Cherokee intentionally discriminated against him on the basis of race, retaliated against him for complaining of race discrimination, and retaliated against him for taking FMLA leave. Cherokee now moves for summary judgment on each of Brown’s claims. For the reasons to follow, Cherokee’s motion (Doc. 30) is due to be granted in part and denied in part. More specifically, only Brown’s FMLA and ADA claims are due to be dismissed. I. BACKGROUND Cherokee Nitrogen, LLC, a subsidiary of LSB Industries, Inc., is a manufacturing plant primarily engaged in the production of fertilizer and chemical components of fertilizer, such as ammonia and urea.1 Justin Brown is a black man whose employment at the manufacturing plant commenced in January of 2020 and ended in April of 2021.2 A. Brown’s Onboarding & Training Brown assumed his first post at the loading dock, where he began his on-the-job training and was tasked with loading and unloading ammonia from trucks and railcars.3 In addition to the

provision of on-the-job training,4 Cherokee maintains a system in which employees who satisfactorily complete certain online training modules are rewarded with increased wages.5 Brown testified in his deposition that supervisor Wade Gaston interrupted his training-module progress on multiple occasions.6 However, Brown ultimately completed the modules and received a raise for doing so, and he is aware of no other individual who completed the modules within a shorter aggregate time period.7 In March of 2020, Brown was transferred from the loading-dock position to the plant’s urea area, where he began his on-the-job training for purposes of becoming a level-two operator.8 B. The Gate Incident

The Coast Guard, which has jurisdiction over security at Cherokee’s plant, requires security guards stationed at the plant’s entryway gate to randomly request searches of employee vehicles entering the plant.9 Upon arrival, all Cherokee employees are required to stop at the guard

1 Declaration of Stuart Carter, Doc. 30-5 at 1; see also Doc. 7. 2 Deposition of Plaintiff Justin Brown, Doc. 30-3 at 5. 3 Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 5. 4 See, e.g., Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 17 (discussing on-the-job training at loading dock). 5 Complaint ¶ 21; Answer ¶ 21. 6 Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 11. 7 See Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 5, 8. 8 Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 20, 23–25. 9 Declaration of Linda Peloquin, Doc. 30-10 at 2. station, where their credentials are checked and, if requested, their vehicles searched.10 Cherokee guards maintain a written record of all such searches.11 On June 4, 2020, a Cherokee security guard asked to search Brown’s glove box, but Brown refused to open it without first being presented a search warrant.12 Brown ultimately parked his vehicle in a nearby lot and rode the rest of the way with a co-worker.13 He was not disciplined for

his refusal to acquiesce to the search, or for anything else related to the Gate Incident.14 With respect to the Gate Incident, Brown further testified as follows: (1) that Wade Gaston specifically instructed the guard to search Brown’s vehicle—i.e., that his selection for search was anything but random; (2) that June 4 was the first date on which Cherokee began implementing the policy; and (3) that following the Gate Incident, his vehicle was searched each day for approximately one month.15 Brown also filed a grievance with Human Resources Manager Keiaire Tate, complaining that the request to search his vehicle was racially discriminatory.16 Tate conducted an investigation and ultimately found no merit to Brown’s claims.17 She followed up with Brown and explained her finding, and Brown concedes that Tate has never racially discriminated against or otherwise wronged him in any way.18

10 Complaint ¶ 31; Answer ¶ 31. 11 See Declaration of Kathy Williams, Doc. 30-11 at 2; see also Williams Decl. Ex. A, Doc. 30-11 at 4–57 (written records). 12 Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 39. 13 Brown Dep. Doc. 30-3 at 39–40. 14 Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 42; Peloquin Decl., Doc. 30-10 at 1–2. 15 Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 35 (“[W]hen I pulled up that day . . . Wade Gaston [said], there he is right there, search his truck.”); id. (“[B]efore the gate incident happened, searching the vehicles wasn’t happening.”); id. at 35–36 (describing daily search following Gate Incident). 16 Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 42. 17 Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 42. 18 Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 42. C. The Brook Incident Cherokee’s policy for covering an absentee-employee’s shift is as follows: Unless the shift is otherwise voluntarily covered, the shift must be covered by the employee whom the absentee would otherwise have relieved.19 Managers are responsible for facilitating that policy—i.e., ensuring that each shift is covered when a scheduled operator is absent.20 Operators are routinely

required to extend their shifts to account for uncovered shifts.21 On January 26, 2021, Brown became upset with a particular manager (“Brook”), who was unable to find volunteer coverage for the first four hours of the shift following Brown’s.22 Cherokee provides evidence indicating that Brown expressed his dismay at the prospect of working four-hours’ overtime by calling Brook a “stupid motherfucker.”23 Brown presents sworn testimony to the contrary.24 In any event, Brook agreed to work the shift in Brown’s stead.25 The next day, Brown was approached about an investigation regarding his conduct during the Brook Incident; in response, Brown complained to human resources that the investigation was racially discriminatory.26 Linda Peloquin (director of human resources) and Michael Foster (general counsel) subsequently met with Brown to discuss his allegations in early February 2021.27

Thereafter, Brown took FMLA leave for his mental disability (anxiety and depression) from February 5, 2021, through March 22, 2021.28 Four days prior to Brown’s return from leave, he was

19 Compl. ¶ 53; Answer ¶ 53. 20 Complaint ¶ 51; Answer ¶ 51. 21 Peloquin Decl., Doc. 30-10 at 2–3. 22 Peloquin Decl., Doc. 30-10 at 2; Declaration of Mark Brook, Doc. 30-13 at 1–2. 23 Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 51; see also Brook Decl., Doc. 30-13 at 1–2; Deposition of Horace Dean, Doc. 30-14 at 3–5; Peloquin Decl., Doc. 30-10 at 2. 24 Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 51. 25 Brook Decl., Doc. 30-13 at 2–3; see also Dean Dep., Doc. 30-14 at 4. 26 Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 59–60. 27 See Doc. 32-10; Deposition of Michael Foster, Doc. 32-4 at 5; see also Complaint, Doc. 1 at 23 ¶¶ 213–216. 28 See Brown Dep., Doc. 30-3 at 66–67. issued a written warning for his conduct during the Brook incident.29 The discipline had no effect on Brown’s title, pay, responsibilities, or anything of the sort.30 D.

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Bluebook (online)
Brown v. Cherokee Nitrogen LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-cherokee-nitrogen-llc-alnd-2023.