Courtney Snider v. L-3 Comm Vertex Aerosp

946 F.3d 660
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 31, 2019
Docket16-60731
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 946 F.3d 660 (Courtney Snider v. L-3 Comm Vertex Aerosp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Courtney Snider v. L-3 Comm Vertex Aerosp, 946 F.3d 660 (5th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

Case: 16-60731 Document: 00515253617 Page: 1 Date Filed: 12/31/2019

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

No. 16-60731 FILED December 31, 2019 Lyle W. Cayce COURTNEY PAINE SNIDER, Clerk

Plaintiff–Counter Defendant–Appellee, Cross–Appellant,

v.

L-3 COMMUNICATIONS VERTEX AEROSPACE, L.L.C.,

Defendant–Counter Claimant–Appellant, Cross–Appellee

WOMBLE CARLYLE SANDRIDGE & RICE, L.L.P.; CHARLES A. EDWARDS, individually and as employee, member, partner, shareholder, and/or officer of Womble Carlyle,

Counter Defendants–Appellees.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi

Before OWEN, Chief Judge, and JOLLY and STEWART, Circuit Judges. OWEN, Chief Judge: This suit was initiated when Courtney Paine Snider filed a complaint under Title VII of the Equal Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII) 1 against L-3

1 Codified at 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. 1 Case: 16-60731 Document: 00515253617 Page: 2 Date Filed: 12/31/2019

No. 16-60731 Communications Vertex Aerospace, L.L.C. (L-3). L-3 asserted counterclaims against Paine Snider. 2 It also brought into the suit and asserted claims against Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice, L.L.P. (Womble), and Charles A. Edwards. L-3 appeals a summary judgment in favor of Paine Snider, Womble, and Edwards. Paine Snider cross-appeals an order dismissing her Title VII claims. We reverse and remand in part and otherwise affirm the district court’s judgment. I Paine Snider, an attorney, was Deputy General Counsel of L-3 and worked from its office in Mississippi. L-3 retained the Womble firm, located in North Carolina, as outside counsel from 2000-2009, and the firm represented L-3 in a variety of legal matters. Edwards, a partner in that firm and its Labor and Employment Practice Group Coordinator until 2007, provided legal services to L-3 for a period of time, but the record reflects that L-3 ceased utilizing his services by September of 2005. Prior to that time, Paine Snider and Edwards had worked together representing L-3 regarding various employment-related matters. L-3’s General Counsel and Paine Snider’s immediate supervisor was Steve Sinquefield. He told Paine Snider in 2006 that L-3 would no longer permit Edwards to perform its legal work. Paine Snider believed as early as 2004 that she had been a victim of gender discrimination by L-3. We will confine the background facts, however, to those pertinent to the issues in this appeal. Email exchanges between Edwards and Paine Snider reflect that from 2005 to 2007, they discussed discrimination and related claims that Paine Snider had against L-3, and in an email sent to Paine Snider at her L-3 email address in June 2006, Edwards

2 Courtney Paine Snider’s briefing in our court referred to “Paine.” The district court referred to her as “Snider.” For clarity we refer to her as Paine Snider. 2 Case: 16-60731 Document: 00515253617 Page: 3 Date Filed: 12/31/2019

No. 16-60731 gave her legal advice as to when statutes of limitation would run on various claims. Later in 2006, another L-3 employee, Janice Wolf, who reported directly to Paine Snider, submitted an internal ethics complaint alleging gender discrimination. L-3 suspected that Paine Snider had given legal advice to Wolf and otherwise assisted her in pursuing her grievances. L-3 was concerned that, in doing so, Paine Snider had violated her ethical obligations to L-3 as its legal counsel. L-3 engaged two outside law firms to investigate, and they submitted a written report to L-3 in December 2006. The report concluded that Paine Snider “likely committed multiple sins of omission in her duty of loyalty.” It further reported that Paine Snider had made “derogatory statements” to L- 3 officers about Steve Sinquefield; had told those officers that Sinquefield “was threatened by her ability and afraid she wanted his job”; and had “herself state[d] that she [could] no longer work with Sinquefield and . . . readily criticiz[ed] him to others within the Company.” Furthermore, the report stated that she had “failed to avail herself of any of the avenues for formal complaint through HR or the ethics function.” The report recommended in mid-December 2006 that L-3 consider terminating Paine Snider’s employment. During L-3’s investigation of Wolf’s internal complaint, Paine Snider asserted that she had also been the victim of gender discrimination and harassment, and she requested L-3 to conduct an internal investigation in January 2007. Though she subsequently withdrew that request, L-3 nevertheless initiated an internal investigation in January 2007 regarding Paine Snider’s allegations and at the conclusion of that investigation the following month, reported its findings to Paine Snider. Paine Snider asked for further investigation, claiming that she had additional information, and she asked that a third party be engaged to consider the matter. L-3 brought in Jim

3 Case: 16-60731 Document: 00515253617 Page: 4 Date Filed: 12/31/2019

No. 16-60731 Slavin, a consultant on business and ethics conduct, whose office was in New York, to assist L-3’s ethics officer. At that time, the Womble firm represented L-3 in certain matters, though Edwards, still a partner at Womble, had done no work for L-3 since September of 2005. Nevertheless, Edwards had extensive personal contact with Paine Snider throughout 2006 and through May 2007. Without notifying or consulting L-3, he assisted Paine Snider in the spring of 2007 in preparing a lengthy written document for submission to Slavin describing Paine Snider’s complaints of discrimination, harassment and retaliation, and identifying Steve Sinquefield as the primary offender. Edwards then directly contacted Slavin via email in early May 2007. He sought a meeting with Slavin in New York on May 15, 2007 to resolve Paine Snider’s issues with L-3’s officers. L-3 immediately called Edwards and his firm, asserting that they had a conflict of interest and that Edwards could not represent Paine Snider. Edwards’s contact with Paine Snider about her claims against L-3 largely came to an end after L-3’s parent company’s general counsel, Kathleen Karelis, confronted Edwards and then expressed to Womble her dismay and concerns regarding Edwards’s conduct. Paine Snider filed her first complaint against L-3 with the EEOC a few months later, in August 2007, alleging harassment, gender discrimination, and retaliation for her internal ethics complaints. The EEOC complaint was essentially drawn from the internal complaint that Edwards was instrumental in preparing. By August 2008, Paine Snider, whose place of employment with L-3 was in Mississippi, had remained unlicensed to practice law in that state. Her failure to become a member of the Mississippi bar had long been a point of contention with L-3. It had asked her to sit for the July 2008 Mississippi bar examination. When L-3 learned she had not done so, it placed Paine Snider on an unpaid leave of absence in August 2008. 4 Case: 16-60731 Document: 00515253617 Page: 5 Date Filed: 12/31/2019

No. 16-60731 While Paine Snider was on leave, L-3 eliminated 26 positions in the company due to an economic downturn. Paine Snider’s position was one of them. Her employment was terminated on February 6, 2009. As these events unfolded, Paine Snider amended her EEOC complaint three times, alleging continued retaliation. In August 2009, the EEOC informed Paine Snider that it was “unable to conclude” that L-3 had violated employment law, and it notified her that she had the right to sue L-3 within 90 days. Paine Snider filed suit against L-3 in November 2009. She brought discrimination, harassment, and retaliation claims.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Untitled Case
E.D. Louisiana, 2026
Untitled Case
N.D. Mississippi, 2026
Rodriguez v. Duffy
Fifth Circuit, 2025
Smith v. Bexar County
W.D. Texas, 2023
Dining Alliance v. Foodbuy
Fifth Circuit, 2023
Harris v. Dobbins
S.D. Mississippi, 2023
Chuttoo v. Horton
E.D. Texas, 2022
Getagadget v. Jet Creations
Fifth Circuit, 2022
United States v. Sheperd
27 F.4th 1075 (Fifth Circuit, 2022)
Deliefde v. Nixon
S.D. Mississippi, 2021

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
946 F.3d 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courtney-snider-v-l-3-comm-vertex-aerosp-ca5-2019.