Dannellia Gladden-Green v. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 20, 2013
Docket03-11-00468-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dannellia Gladden-Green v. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. (Dannellia Gladden-Green v. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dannellia Gladden-Green v. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-11-00468-CV

Dannellia Gladden-Green, Appellant

v.

Freescale Semiconductor, Inc., Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 353RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-GN-09-003894, HONORABLE RHONDA HURLEY, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Dannellia Gladden-Green filed this suit against her former employer, Freescale

Semiconductor, Inc., complaining of racial and gender discrimination in Freescale’s employment

decisions pertaining to her and of retaliation against her for participating in discrimination

investigations. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Freescale on all of Gladden-

Green’s claims. On appeal, Gladden-Green contends that the trial court erred by granting the

summary judgment as to two of her claims: the denial of a promotion and the later termination of

her employment. We will affirm the judgment.

BACKGROUND

Gladden-Green, who is African-American, was hired by Freescale in February 2005

as a Product Marketing Manager. Shortly thereafter she was asked to perform expanded duties at her

same pay and position level. She agreed to do so, at the urging of human-resources staff that she be a “team player.” Gladden-Green expressed interest in advancing to higher, executive-level positions

within the company, and after about seven months in her original role, she was asked to serve as the

Executive Assistant to the CEO. According to Gladden-Green, this was a “role designed to launch

the incumbent into the next level of management.”

During Gladden-Green’s tenure as Executive Assistant, the CEO began expressing

concerns to human resources about her performance and doubts as to her ability to serve in a

senior leadership role. The human-resources team then worked closely with Gladden-Green to find

a suitable alternate position. After she had served about eight months as Executive Assistant to

the CEO, she was offered and accepted the position of Director of Business Operations in

the automotive sector, a position that Gladden-Green later alleged to provide little opportunity

for growth, as Freescale had decided not to invest in growing that business. The Senior Vice

President for Human Resources, Kurt Twining, later explained the placement of Gladden-Green

into that position as being due to her inability to create demand within the senior management

for her services.

When Gladden-Green decided that her career was limited in the automotive sector,

she began looking for another role within the company. She informed human resources that she

was interested in global sales and marketing, specifically in the Asian market. During that time,

the company was looking to create a marketing sector that was market-driven rather than product-

or technology-focused. Joe Yiu was the Senior Vice President for Global Consumer Marketing

and was involved in the creation of that new sector. Gladden-Green’s automotive position

was eventually eliminated, but Freescale continued to employ her. Then several months later, in

February 2008, Yiu offered her an executive-level position of Global Consumer Marketing Lead.

2 Gladden-Green readily accepted, but within two weeks, the offer was rescinded because Yiu did not

have the authority to offer her the position.

That authority resided in Lou Lutostanski, another Senior Vice President, who

proceeded to formally consider Gladden-Green for an executive-level position within his

organization by interviewing her, as did Henri Richard, the Senior Vice President of Global Sales

and Marketing, and others. Based on these interviews, Lutostanski did not reinstate Yiu’s offer

to Gladden-Green of the Global position, nor did he offer her the position of Consumer Marketing

Lead for the Americas, a lower-level, regional position Lutostanski was seeking to fill, because

he felt that she did not have enough relevant practical experience, specifically direct face-to-face

customer contacts.

Human resources assured Gladden-Green that they would “make this right,” and

she was asked for input on how she could add value to the Global Sales and Marketing team. Her

interests coincided with a need identified by the heads of that team for centralized support to bridge

across the multiple organizational boundaries. With the support of human resources and the Global

team, Gladden-Green crafted a job description for herself with the title of “Director of Marketing

Operations” in the Global Sales and Marketing sector. In the process of finalizing her appointment

to that position, the word “director” was removed from her title by the manager to whom she

reported. Gladden-Green raised the issue of her title and pay with human resources and the sales and

marketing department, claiming her pay was too low for her position and compared with similarly

positioned and qualified peers. She claims to have never received a successful resolution on the

issues, but rather was assured that she was being “appropriately paid.”

3 After a few months in her newest role, Gladden-Green was assigned to a new

manager, Greg Heinlein. Freescale brought in Heinlein as Vice President of Sales and Marketing

to improve that sector’s overall organization, determine how to cut costs, and downsize by laying

off “substantial numbers” of people. In this process, he consulted with other executives and staff to

learn more about various employees and their employment and performance history with Freescale.

Heinlein met with the four to six employees who reported directly to him and

determined which roles they were fulfilling, which duties or positions were unnecessary, and how to

restructure and reassign job duties. For several of the employees (all white) within Gladden-Green’s

group, Heinlein created new positions or expanded their duties, based on their qualifications and

experience. He determined that Gladden-Green’s job (as well as a few others) was an unnecessary,

administrative one because the position amounted mostly to checking the work of other people. She

also, in his opinion, had not been very successful in influencing the integration of the segment

marketing team with the product marketing team and did not have the skills or experience to fulfill

the positions into which he moved some of the other employees under his supervision.

Meanwhile, in July 2008, Lutostanski, Richard, and human resources interviewed

Glen Burchers, a white male, for the position of Global Consumer Marketing Director. The

interviewers decided that Burchers was not ready to take on the Global role, but they found value

in Burchers’s consumer expertise, industry knowledge, and marketing skills and offered him the

position of Marketing Director for the Americas, with the intent to evaluate his performance for

potential future promotion to the Global position. Shortly thereafter in September 2008, Burchers

was promoted to the position of Global Consumer Marketing Director.

4 Also in July 2008, Gladden-Green submitted a declaration to the Equal Employment

Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in support of charges of racial discrimination against Freescale

filed by two other African-American former employees, setting forth how she believed she

had been discriminated against because of her race. Although Gladden-Green expressed her goals

and thoughts with Heinlein about how she could add value—by further helping to integrate the

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