Dayna Scruggs v. Garst Seed Company

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 20, 2009
Docket07-2266
StatusPublished

This text of Dayna Scruggs v. Garst Seed Company (Dayna Scruggs v. Garst Seed Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dayna Scruggs v. Garst Seed Company, (7th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 07-2266

D AYNA L. S CRUGGS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

G ARST S EED C OMPANY, Defendant-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division. No. 05 C 67—Allen Sharp, Judge.

A RGUED JUNE 4, 2008—D ECIDED N OVEMBER 20, 2009

Before B AUER, W OOD , and W ILLIAMS, Circuit Judges. W ILLIAMS, Circuit Judge. Dayna Scruggs appeals from the grant of summary judgment in favor of her former employer, Garst Seed Company, on her claims of retalia- tion and a hostile work environment. A company-wide restructuring eliminated her position before she filed a charge of discrimination, so the company did not retaliate against her for filing the discrimination charge when it eliminated her position. In addition, although 2 No. 07-2266

she contends the company also retaliated against her when it did not hire her for one of the open positions after the restructuring, Garst hired the person who had previously held the position. The incumbent was experi- enced in the job, and Scruggs has not created an issue for trial that the hiring decision was pretextual. Finally, the relatively isolated gender-based comments and remarks Scruggs’s supervisor directed toward her were not suffi- ciently severe or pervasive to rise to the level of a hostile work environment. Therefore, we affirm the judgment of the district court.

I. BACKGROUND Dayna Scruggs worked at Garst Seed Company’s seed breeding research facility in Brookston, Indiana, where she was on the soft wheat breeding team. The two other members of the Brookston soft wheat breeding team were Curtis Beazer, a Wheat Breeder, and Eugene Glover, a Research Assistant. Beazer and Glover both held exempt, salaried positions. Scruggs’s position as a Research Technician was a nonexempt, hourly wage position. Scruggs and Beazer began working together in 1988 or 1989. When Beazer ascended to Wheat Breeder in 1995, he became Scruggs’s supervisor. Scruggs maintains that after Beazer became her supervisor in 1995, he re- peatedly gave her trouble. The conduct to which she points includes her contention that between 2000 and 2002, Beazer refused to provide her with assistance in dealing with temporary employees, including two occa- No. 07-2266 3

sions when temporary employees reacted negatively after Scruggs terminated their employment. She states that one time, while she was discussing his alleged lack of support, Beazer told her that she was “too dumb to catch on” and that the temporary employees were her own responsibility. Scruggs also alleges that Beazer took several steps in an attempt to have her quit her job. She claims that he intentionally under-built a new greenhouse facility in 2001, changed the temperature in the greenhouse on several occasions, and performed “crosses” of plants too early. She also says that Beazer instructed Glover to spy on her during 2002 and 2003. Scruggs maintains that Beazer later began checking on her several times a day, and that he also once asked her what it would take for her to leave because he would rather hire a 20-year old to do the field work that he and Scruggs currently had to perform. Scruggs also pointed to several events in 2003. That year, Scruggs says that Beazer introduced her to other employees as the person in charge of “cookies with sprin- kles.” Scruggs complained to Beazer’s supervisor, David Worrall, about this comment. A short time later, Beazer struck a temporary employee. Scruggs did not witness the incident, but she reported it and also said that Beazer had previously hit her. Scruggs maintains that Beazer retaliated against her for reporting the incident by re- quiring that she take on additional work responsibilities usually handled by Beazer and Glover, although she reported to Worrall only that she was “overwhelmed” by 4 No. 07-2266

the job duties she had been assigned. At another point in 2003, Beazer stated that he hated “pushy, aggressive women” and that Scruggs was such a woman. Scruggs also asserts that at various points during her employment, Beazer said that she was “made for the back seat of a car,” that her parties were “drunken fias- cos,” that she was not “smart enough,” and that she looked like a “UPS driver,” a “dyke,” and was a “redneck.” In March of 2004, Worrall met with Scruggs and Beazer in an effort to straighten out the issues between the two. Scruggs told Worrall that she did not trust Beazer because he was “manufacturing” research data and complained about Beazer’s comment that he would like to replace her with a 20-year-old employee. Worrall responded that he thought Scruggs had misunderstood the statement. Scruggs then left the meeting. She says that Beazer followed her down the hallway dancing, whistling, and singing. Scruggs was not the only person at Garst to have prob- lems with Beazer. Beazer also made comments about Eugene Glover and Brian Rice, male Research Assistants at the Brookston facility. Beazer called Glover “fat” and made fun of Rice’s home state. He also made derogatory comments about certain employees’ cars, among other things. Scruggs testified in her deposition that Beazer did not get along with “[a]nyone that was marginally intolerant or had an opinion he could not tolerate.” Garst managers and Human Resources Director D.J. Horrigan discussed the Brookston facility in the early part of 2004 and the problems Beazer presented. Horrigan No. 07-2266 5

sent Worrall and two other managers a memorandum summarizing discussions regarding the Brookston site in May 2004. The memorandum contemplated a reorgani- zation where Beazer would be demoted to Assistant Breeder or offered a severance package, Glover’s position would be eliminated, and Scruggs would keep her posi- tion. The proposal discussed in the memorandum was not carried out. Instead, in September 2004, Syngenta Seeds, Inc. pur- chased a majority interest in Garst. Syngenta already owned a wheat research and sales program in soft red winter wheat. Therefore, to eliminate redundancy, the company restructured the soft wheat research opera- tions. It closed a facility in Arkansas and restructured staffing at the other soft wheat research facilities, including Brookston. The company decided it would have three salaried employees at each soft wheat research location: Breeder, Assistant Wheat Breeder, and Research Assistant. The position of Research Technician would be eliminated. That was the role Scruggs held in Brookston. Worrall traveled to the Brookston facility in Novem- ber 2004 and informed employees of the restructuring. Scruggs was on medical leave at the time, so she was not present. Worrall says that he called Scruggs at home in November 2004 and left her a message advising her that a restructuring would be occurring. Scruggs, however, asserts that she did not receive such a message and that she did not learn of the restructuring until several months later. On December 3, 2004, Scruggs filed a discrimination charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Com- 6 No. 07-2266

mission (EEOC) that alleged gender discrimination, a hostile work environment, and retaliation. Also that month, Worrall informed Beazer that he would not be continuing at Brookston, and Barton Fogleman became the new Wheat Breeder at that location. With Fogleman in place, the company set out to hire persons for the two other soft wheat breeding positions at Brookston. Fogleman, Horrigan, and Worrall inter- viewed candidates for the Brookston Assistant Breeder and Research Assistant positions. Approximately twenty persons applied for the Assistant Breeder position, in- cluding Glover. The company interviewed Glover for the Assistant Breeder role but ultimately selected another candidate, Jennifer Vonderw ell.

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