Cooper v. Wal-Mart Transportation, LLC

662 F. Supp. 2d 757, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 87983
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedSeptember 24, 2009
DocketCivil Action H-08-0085
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 662 F. Supp. 2d 757 (Cooper v. Wal-Mart Transportation, LLC) 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
Cooper v. Wal-Mart Transportation, LLC, 662 F. Supp. 2d 757, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 87983 (S.D. Tex. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

LEE H. ROSENTHAL, District Judge.

This is an employment discrimination suit. Leandros Cooper, a truck driver who worked for Wal-Mart Transportation, LLC and Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., alleges discrimination and a hostile work environment based on his race. He also alleges that he was terminated from his job in retaliation for filing a Charge of Discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Texas Workforce Commission. His final claim is that he was assaulted by a Wal-Mart manager.

Wal-Mart has moved for summary judgment. (Docket Entry No. 31). Cooper has responded to the summary judgment motion, (Docket Entry No. 35), Wal-Mart has replied, (Docket Entry No. 36), and Cooper has filed a surreply, (Docket Entry No. 37). Wal-Mart has also moved to strike two of Cooper’s potential witnesses, (Docket Entry Nos. 24 and 25); no response has been filed.

Based on a careful review of the complaint; the motions, responses, and replies; the summary judgment record; and the applicable law, this court denies WalMart’s motion for summary judgement as to the hostile work environment claim but otherwise grants the motion. Both motions to strike are granted.

The parties are ordered to appear for a status conference on Thursday, October 15 at 3:30 p.m. in Courtroom 11-B to set a schedule and trial date.

The reasons for these rulings are explained below.

I. The Evidence in the Summary Judgment Record

Leandros Demetrous Cooper is an African-American male born in June 1959. He is an Army veteran, the father of two adult children, and a truck driver by trade. (Docket Entry No, 24, Ex. 2 at 9-10). Cooper began working as an interregional truck driver for Wal-Mart on October 4, 2005. (Docket Entry No. 31, Ex. 1 at 75, *762 Ex. 5 at ¶ 2). During the first several months of his employment, Cooper was assigned to Wal-Mart’s distribution center in Hurricane, Utah. (Id.). He later asked for, and received, a transfer to the Sealy, Texas distribution center, where he began working on January 27, 2006. (Docket Entry No. 35, Ex. 3). In an affidavit, Dana Fuller, Regional Human Resources Manager for Wal-Mart, stated that the transfer was granted “in order to resolve ‘issues’ that had arisen between [Cooper] and other drivers, including [his] team driver with whom he jointly operated a commercial Wal-Mart truck.” (Docket Entry No. 31, Ex. 5, ¶ 3).

Cooper has submitted a declaration stating that while he worked at the Hurricane Distribution Center in Utah, several persons made racially discriminatory comments. (Docket Entry No. 35, Ex. 5, ¶ 1). In October 2005, Eric Lasher, the General Terminal Manager, told Cooper “no guns,” which Cooper thought was an offensive reference to a stereotype of African-Americans as gun owners. The next month, Lasher said that Cooper would “run right through this place.” Also in November, a coworker said “monkey’s dress like that.” Cooper complained about the coworker’s comment to Michael DiGioia, an operations manager. In December 2005 or January 2006, a “husband and wife team” said “here comes the nigger.” In January 2006, a driver named Don said “I can’t be seen riding around with a burnt co-driver,” which Cooper took as a reference to his skin color. Cooper complained about Don’s comment to Julie Winterton, the Human Resources Manager. Winterton said “that she thought [Cooper] wanted to join the Klan.” Cooper lodged discrimination complaints with two internal entities: Wal-Mart’s Resources for Living and Wal-Mart’s Ethics Committee. He also complained to Darwin Jones, the regional personnel manager. Just before Cooper transferred to Sealy, where Paul Peterson is the general terminal manager, Lasher told Cooper that “Paul Peterson is my peezoe.” The record does not reveal what “peezoe” means or what Cooper interpreted it to mean. (Docket Entry No. 35, Ex. 3).

Soon after Cooper began working at Sealy, he accused his team driver — WalMart’s drivers work in teams of two in a single truck — of trying to kill him. The team driver reported that Cooper began yelling profanities at him, encouraging him to cross the median and to “go ahead and kill us both, kill us now.” (Id. at ¶ 4). Some time later, Cooper’s truck caught fire. Cooper told his manager that the team driver had started the fire. Cooper reported to his manager that he thought his team driver “might have messed with the wiring” because he had asked Cooper to put his sleeping bag and blankets under the truck’s bunk, which Cooper believed was for the purpose of causing the fire. (Id.). Cooper’s manager told him that the allegations were outlandish. Cooper responded that he was “just paranoid.” (Id.).

Cooper felt mistreated starting on his first day at Wal-Mart’s Sealy Distribution Center. He alleges that he was forced to sit outside the office of human resources manager Kay Murphy while she and three drivers “went over my personal information on Ms. Murphy’s computer.” (Id. at ¶ 2). Cooper’s dissatisfaction continued:

Then they made me go through a second orientation. They also made me sit in a third orientation for one day. When I was trained they overbooked my loads and I did not have time to take lunch breaks. This lasted 7 to 8 days. Management did not train any of the other white drivers (Don, Dennis, Darren, and Mike) who went to orientation with that *763 way. Two of them (Darren and Dennis) became store ambassadors. Further, when I first started at Sealy, they made me run local and domicile even though I bid for and was awarded interregional. White drivers (George Murdock, Calvin Johnson, Michael Chmelik, Dennis Ramsey, Roy Whatley and Dennis Miller) were permitted to run the routes they bid for.

(Id.). According to Cooper, in “September/October of 2006, I complained to Dana Fuller, the Regional Human Resources Manager that white drivers are given more favorable routes, better mileage, and better pay.” (Id.). Cooper’s specific complaint about pay, by his own admission, was that “my pay was lower then it was at the Hurricane Distribution Center.” (Id. at ¶ 4). Cooper also asserts that he complained about having to pass six drug screens, which was more than white drivers. “I specifically complained,” he states, “that I was being discriminated against.” (Id.). Fuller remembers differently, testifying in her declaration that “at no time did [Cooper] ever inform me or any other member of management that he believed any alleged conduct directed towards him was on account of his membership in any protected classification.” (Docket Entry No. 31, Ex. 5). For the purposes of this summary judgment motion, Cooper’s version must be accepted as true.

Fuller and Murphy investigated Cooper’s complaints “seriously and promptly and thoroughly,” finding that “[n]one of his complaints could be substantiated.” (Id.). Fuller testified in her deposition that when she looked at Cooper’s drug-testing record, it showed that he had only been tested twice, which was “not unusual” and “not a lot.” (Docket Entry No. 31, Ex. 4 at 36-37). She found no signs of deviation from Wal-Mart’s randomized testing program. (Id.).

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Bluebook (online)
662 F. Supp. 2d 757, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 87983, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-wal-mart-transportation-llc-txsd-2009.