Caviston v. Johnson Controls, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 23, 2020
Docket1:19-cv-01409
StatusUnknown

This text of Caviston v. Johnson Controls, Inc. (Caviston v. Johnson Controls, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caviston v. Johnson Controls, Inc., (M.D. Pa. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA CAVISTON, Plaintiff, CIVIL ACTION NO. 1:19-cv-01409 Vv. (JONES, C.J.) JOHNSON CONTROLS, INC. d/b/a Witglt JOHNSON CONTROLS (or “JCI”), . JUN 3 RE Defendant. PER MNS 20 RR a MEMORANDUM This age discrimination case is before us ona discovery dispute

(Doc. 19) which has been referred to us for resolution. (Doc. 20; Doc. 21).

I. STATEMENT OF Facts In his amended complaint, the plaintiff, Robert Caviston, alleges _

discrimination under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq., and a similar state law claim under the Pennsylvania Human Relations Act (PHRA), 43 P.S. § 951 et seq. Prior to filing his complaint, the plaintiff exhausted his administrative remedies before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission. In his amended complaint, the plaintiff has alleged that he is a 57-

year-old male who worked for the defendant and its predecessor for

approximately 23 years until his allegedly unlawful termination on April 26, 2019. The defendant, Johnson Controls, markets automotive systems and building controls, including seating and interior systems, HVAC equipment, building automation, security, fire detection, batteries, and other related services. At the time of his termination, the plaintiff was working as a fire and security account executive. The plaintiff has alleged that, during the last few years of his employment with the defendant, the defendant's management began a campaign to terminate older employees, clearly favoring younger employees and exhibiting discriminatory animus toward the plaintiff and other older employees. As examples of this conduct, the plaintiff has alleged that, beginning in late 2016, the defendant’s management began to terminate several older employees and replace them with substantially

younger new hires under the alleged pretext of reductions in force or layoffs. In addition, the defendant's management treated the plaintiff and other older co-workers in a_ derogatory, demeaning, condescending manner; it selectively enforced policies against the plaintiff and other older employees; and it gave unreasonably high and

unachievable quotas to the plaintiff and other older employees. This □

treatment was unlike the ‘treatment of younger co-workers of the _ defendant. In addition, one of the members of the management team, market director Joseph Emrick, referred to the plaintiff as a “dinosaur” □

and informed the plaintiff that “he was slowing down.” Emrick, along with sales manager Ken Bouge, stripped the plaintiff and other older employees of key accounts and/or responsibilities and □

gave them to younger current employees and new hires. Emrick allegedly informed the plaintiff that the “new company culture was not a fit for

him” and the defendant's management routinely stated at regional meetings that the defendant wanted to “refresh the sales force.” Finally, Bouge showed a clear preference for younger employees and regularly

screamed, criticized, and attempted to physically intimidate the plaintiff during at least one meeting. As a result of the discriminatory and disparate treatment, the plaintiff expressed several concerns of discriminatory treatment on

account of his age to Emrich and security sales manager Randy Gleit, who also supervised the plaintiff. Those expressed concerns included informing them that the accounts/business attributable to the plaintiff

a.

were given to substantially younger employees to manage. Despite those □ .

complaints of discrimination, the defendant allegedly failed to investigate or resolve those issues and the plaintiff was subjected to

progressive hostility and animosity by defendant's management because of his age or his complaints of age discrimination, which included the following: treating the plaintiff ina rude and demeaning manner; Emrick and Bouge scrutinizing and criticizing the plaintiffs work; Bouge and

service manager Rick Hartinger refusing to provide the plaintiff with the demonstration products and support that he needed for a multi-million- dollar account; and assigning a new, substantially younger employee to

assist the plaintiff with his account while advising the plaintiff that he

not permitted to help or train the younger employee, yet still

criticizing the plaintiff and holding him accountable when customers complained that the younger employee made mistakes. . On April 26, 2019, in close proximity to his complaints of age discrimination, the plaintiff was abruptly informed by Gleit, Emrich, and

a human resource representative that he had been selected by the defendant for layoff (i.e., termination without any comparable alternative position offered). The plaintiff further alleged that he was selected for

-4A.

layoff because of his age, despite the fact that: the defendant continually □ hired younger and additional sales people; the plaintiff was more skilled and had better relationships than similarly situated employees retained; the plaintiff was experienced and had proven capable of selling in two separate lines of product for the defendant (fire or security) while other.

younger sales people retained by the defendant were only capable or experienced in selling in one line of business; and the plaintiff was terminated in a time-frame when he was engaging in substantial sales and would have accomplished his current sales target. Following the plaintiffs termination, he was offered an unsolicited

severance pay package if he agreed to waive legal claims against the defendant, including those for age discrimination. The plaintiff did not

sign the proposed severance agreement. Finally, the plaintiff has alleged that he believes that he was terminated from his position with the.

defendant because of his advanced age and his complaints of age □ discrimination.

Following the plaintiff's separation from employment, the plaintiff

filed a charge of discrimination with the EEOC asserting age

discrimination and retaliation. After he filed his claims in this court, the

defendant yefused to rehire him for certain positions despite being

qualified. In addition to failing to give the plaintiff's applications □

meaningful review, the defendant has provided negative information to prospective employers in an effort to interfere with the plaintit? s current job search. oe □ : On the basis of these allegations, the plaintiff filed his complaint □□

and subsequent amended complaint for age discrimination, hostile work

environment, and retaliation under the ADEA, and for post-employment retaliation and failure to hire, also under the AD EA. .

On April 3, 2020, the defendant filed its answer to the amended complaint with affirmative defenses. (Doc. 31). In its answer, the defendant denied the allegations that it discriminated ok retaliated against the plaintiff in any respect. In addition, the defendant asserts. that the plaintiff s age played no role in the termination decision, J □ Thereafter, a discovery dispute arose regarding answers to. □□

plaintiffs interrogatories and ‘responses to plaintiff : requests for. □ production of documents. This discovery dispute was referred to the ~ undersigned United States magistrate judge for resolution. We conducted a telephonic conference on March 10, 2020, wherein counsel agreed to

meet to attempt to resolve the issues and report back to the court. After being notified by counsel that the parties have worked through many of

the disputes with some success, a telephone conference was requested

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