Darryl Jones v. City of Franklin

309 F. App'x 938
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 5, 2009
Docket08-5180
StatusUnpublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 309 F. App'x 938 (Darryl Jones v. City of Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darryl Jones v. City of Franklin, 309 F. App'x 938 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge.

Darryl Jones, Michael Jones, Anthony Pasley, and Stephen Gibson are black firefighters employed by the City of Franklin, Tennessee. They filed separate complaints in August 2006, alleging that the City failed to promote them because of their race and failed to eliminate a racially hostile work environment. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the City, holding that the hostile-work-environment claims were not administratively exhausted with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and that each of the failure-to-promote claims was either time-barred or not supported by sufficient evidence. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual background

The four plaintiffs were all hired by the City as entry-level firefighters during the 1980s. Darryl Jones and Stephen Gibson have each been promoted only once, to the rank of engineer. Michael Jones has received two promotions — from firefighter to engineer and then to his current position as a lieutenant. Anthony Pasley has been promoted three times and is currently a captain. During their many years of service, each of the men has applied one or *940 more times for a promotion that he did not ultimately receive. They allege that they possessed similar or superior qualifications to the white applicants who succeeded in being promoted. Accordingly, they complain that the City discriminated against them because of their race by fading to promote them.

The plaintiffs also allege that the City failed to eliminate a racially hostile work environment. They describe many incidents where white firefighters, including high-ranking members of the department, made racially derogatory remarks or engaged in hostile conduct directed at the plaintiffs and other black firefighters. A few of the incidents that they allege are described below.

During Stephen Gibson’s initial training period, he was one of only two black trainees in his group. He alleges that his white supervisor imposed a harsher standard of physical performance on the two black trainees, particularly referencing an exercise in which the trainees were required to extinguish fires that were ignited in 55-gallon barrels containing gasoline and diesel fuel. Gibson’s supervisor paired him with the other black trainee, and the two were required to perform the exercise four times. White trainees who followed were required to perform the task only once. Because Gibson and his partner went first, they experienced the fire at greater intensity than did the white trainees. Gibson alleges that he sustained severe burns on his face. He also alleges that his supervisor laughed at the injuries and stated that “blacks were afraid of fire.”

The plaintiffs’ allegations also include the frequent use of racist language in the department, including offensive slurs and other discriminatory comments. Darryl Jones alleges that the same supervisor referred to above by Stephen Gibson once threatened, with rope in hand, to “string [Jones] up.” The plaintiffs also describe a meeting of City officials at which candidates for the position of Chief were discussed. A black firefighter was among the applicants, and one official at the meeting allegedly referred to that candidate by stating that no “rug head” would ever be promoted to Chief.

The plaintiffs further describe several incidents in which white firefighters, including a past Chief and a Deputy Chief, used the word “nigger” to refer to the plaintiffs and other black members of the fire department. On one such occasion, a white woman came to the fire station looking for her husband, who was a black firefighter. She told two white firefighters about marital problems that the couple was experiencing. When she left, one of the white firefighters was overheard saying to the other: “Well, that’s what you get for marrying a nigger.” Non-plaintiff firefighters, both white and black, as well as other City employees, corroborate the plaintiffs’ allegations regarding these and many other incidents in which offensive and discriminatory language was used at the department.

B. EEOC charges

The precise content of the various charges filed by the plaintiffs with the EEOC is key to the resolution of this case. We will therefore describe below each EEOC document that appears in the record.

Darryl Jones completed an EEOC intake form in September 2004. In it, he alleged discrimination on the basis of race, and he wrote that a City employee had “made the racial statement ‘Rug Head’ *941 while the Fire Department was still in the process of selecting the new Fire Chief.” Jones also stated that “Blacks are purposely being overlooked when it comes to promotion positions.” He filed his first formal EEOC charge in January 2005. The charge states that, in July 2004, he received an “unfair evaluation rating that affeet[ed] the percentage of raise [he was] to receive.” He also alleged that the evaluation scores he received from his supervisor, Michael Jones, had been reduced by the Deputy Chief. In March 2005, Darryl Jones filed a second EEOC charge. He complained that “[t]he City Manager gave false information to the Williamson County Review Appeal Newspaper,” and stated his belief that he was being discriminated against in retaliation for the filing of the previous EEOC charge.

Michael Jones filed his first EEOC charge in February 2005, alleging that he had been denied his 2004 annual evaluation. He also described the alleged reduction by the Deputy Chief of the evaluation score that he had given to Darryl Jones. In March 2005, Michael Jones filed another EEOC charge. It contained identical allegations to those in the charge filed by Darryl Jones that same month. Michael Jones filed his third and final EEOC charge in January 2006. That charge stated that he was “being denied promotion because of [his] race, Black, and [his] age, 47.” It went on to describe the use by the City of a noncertified test for promotion purposes. “All four Black employees failed the test, but most of the White employees passed the test.” The January 2006 charge then described the transfer of “a White administrative captain” to the “shift captain position without any required testing.”

In June 2005, Stephen Gibson filed his one EEOC charge. The charge reads as follows:

I believe because of my race/Black, I have been subjected to a discriminatory selection process that has an adverse impact regarding promotional opportunities for blacks as a class. Less qualified whites are systematically promoted over qualified blacks when the Franklin Fire Department continues to change the promotional requirements/job descriptions to advance lesser qualified whites to the ranks of Captain and above.
Recently, a white city official made the racial comment that as long as he had anything to do with promotions, a rug head would never be in charge of a department of the Franklin Fire Department. ...
The Franklin Fire Department discriminates against blacks as a class in promotional opportunities in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended.

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309 F. App'x 938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darryl-jones-v-city-of-franklin-ca6-2009.