Dennis Loggins v. Costco Wholesale Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedOctober 23, 2025
Docket2:23-cv-02749
StatusUnknown

This text of Dennis Loggins v. Costco Wholesale Corporation (Dennis Loggins v. Costco Wholesale Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dennis Loggins v. Costco Wholesale Corporation, (W.D. Tenn. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE WESTERN DIVISION

DENNIS LOGGINS, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) No. 2:23-cv-02749-TLP-cgc v. ) ) JURY DEMAND COSTCO WHOLESALE CORPORATION, ) ) Defendant. )

ORDER GRANTING COSTCO’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

In November 2023, Dennis Loggins (“Plaintiff”) sued Costco Wholesale Corporation (“Costco”), alleging that Costco discriminated against him based on his race and retaliated against him for engaging in protected activities. (ECF No. 1.) Plaintiff describes himself as an African American male. (Id.) According to Plaintiff, he engaged in two types of protected activity. First he recorded a coworker without her consent so he could use the recording as evidence in a separate lawsuit against Costco. (Id.) And second, he reported his manager for allegedly shoving him with his shoulder while Plaintiff was standing at the time clock. (Id.) Costco moved for summary judgment. (ECF No. 27.) Plaintiff responded to dispute the facts and law (ECF Nos. 30–32,) and Costco replied. (ECF Nos. 33–34.) For the reasons below, the Court GRANTS Costco’s Motion for Summary Judgment. BACKGROUND I. Plaintiff’s Employment with Costco Plaintiff has tried to put the facts into dispute here. But they are largely not disputed, absent one exception.1 The Court will therefore lay out the facts here, as they are undisputed, and will note the fact which Plaintiff has properly disputed. Plaintiff worked for Costco for about nine years. Stefan Mannsbart hired Plaintiff as a Bakery Manager at Costco’s Northeast Memphis warehouse in December 2014. (ECF No. 27-2

at PageID 135.) Costco transferred Plaintiff to its Southeast Memphis warehouse on August 31, 2015, after demoting him. (Id.) About three years later, Costco transferred Mannsbart to the Southeast Memphis warehouse. (Id.) And about three years after that, Costco demoted Plaintiff a second time—to the role of Cashier Assistant. (Id.) Costco used a formal application and selection process to fill open positions and cross trainings, which are opportunities for employees to receive training for a role they do not already hold, at the Southeast Memphis warehouse. (Id. at PageID 136.) In 2021, Costco posted and filled three forklift driver positions. (Id. at PageID 136–38.) It posted one part-time position on May 30 and hired Matthew Davis, the only applicant, on July 26. (Id. at PageID 137.) It posted a full-time position on August 22 and hired Thomas Crawford, the only applicant, on September

12. (Id.) Finally, it posted a full-time position on October 24 and hired John Christenson, one of two applicants, on November 7. (Id.) Plaintiff did not apply for any of these positions. (Id.) Instead, after the three positions had been filled, he added his name to a list for those interested in forklift driver cross-training in

1 As Costco notes in its Reply to Plaintiff’s Response to Costco’s Motion for Summary Judgment, Plaintiff agrees with Costco on many of the undisputed facts in this case. (ECF No. 33 at PageID 816; ECF No. 31.) Further this Court agrees with few exceptions that, of the remaining facts, Plaintiff “either (1) simply stated he ‘does not have knowledge’; (2) ‘denied’ or only ‘admitted in part’ the fact without citing any record evidence actually contradicting the specific fact; or (3) ‘denied’ factual statements related to what video shows occurred at the time clock, solely by citing an affidavit of Elvie Maclin (even when irrelevant to the fact).” (ECF No. 33 at PageID 816.) December 2021. (Id. at PageID 137–38.) Between December 2021 and Plaintiff’s termination, Costco did not hire or conduct cross-trainings for forklift drivers, and Plaintiff never applied for any forklift driver opening. (Id. at PageID 138.) On February 21, 2023, Plaintiff called Dannetta Brimm to lodge a complaint that

Mannsbart had shoved him with his shoulder about one week before while Plaintiff was clocking in in the morning. (Id. at PageID 138.) Brim relayed that complaint to Justin Spira, a Vice President and Regional Operations Manager for Costco. (Id. at PageID 139.) Spira called Plaintiff to discuss his complaint, and Plaintiff said the alleged shove occurred near the time he called Brim. (Id.) Spira had Sean Constable, a member of Costco’s Southeast Regional Loss Prevention Team, review the security footage, and after reviewing the footage of the time clock from February 10 to February 22, Constable confirmed that Mannsbart had not touched Plaintiff as he had claimed. (Id.) In fact, during those dates, the video revealed that Mannsbart and Plaintiff were only near each other on February 11. (Id.) And Mannsbart did not contact Plaintiff at that time. (Id.)

Constable reported his conclusion to Spira. (Id.) The Court also reviewed the security video footage of the time clock from every day that Plaintiff worked in February 2023 and found no evidence that Mannsbart shoved Plaintiff during that month.2 Sometime around February 17, 2023, Winfred Hamilton, a coworker of Plaintiff’s, reported that Plaintiff had told him that he had filed charges with the local police against

2 Plaintiff attempts to put the video footage into dispute by providing the Court with the affidavit of Elve Maclin, testifying to the shoving incident. (ECF No. 31 at PageID 800–01, 808–09.) Defendant argues, citing Scott v. Harris and Shreve v. Franklin County, that the Court has to take the video evidence as undisputed when it contradicts any affidavit. (ECF No. 33 at PageID 816– 17 (citing Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372, 380–81 (2007); Shreve v. Franklin County, 743 F.3d 126, 132 (6th Cir. 2014)).) Upon review of the case law, the Court agrees with Defendant and finds the video evidence to be undisputed. Mannsbart for the alleged shove. (Id. at PageID 140.) On February 23, Costco’s counsel emailed Plaintiff’s counsel asking if the report was accurate. (Id.) Plaintiff’s counsel responded that Plaintiff had not filed a police report. (Id.) Spira learned of Plaintiff’s counsel’s response and concluded that Plaintiff had spread false and malicious gossip in the warehouse. (Id.)

Plaintiff later filed a police report on March 27. (Id. at PageID 143.) II. Complaint Against Plaintiff and Discipline In 2017, Plaintiff recorded his coworker Angela Tuggle without her consent. (Id. at PageID 140.) He claims that he was trying to collect evidence to be used in a separate lawsuit that he had filed against Costco.3 (Id.) Plaintiff’s counsel deposed Tuggle on March 16, 2023, in this case and revealed that Plaintiff had previously recorded her. (Id. at PageID 140–41.) Tuggle then submitted a written complaint to Costco protesting Plaintiff’s recording of her without consent. (Id. at PageID 141.) In her complaint, Tuggle accused Plaintiff of violating Costco’s Employee Agreement. (Id.) She argued that his actions were grounds for termination, and she asked Costco to terminate Plaintiff’s employment. (Id.) Wendy Davis, a Senior Vice

President at Costco, and Spira learned about Tuggle’s complaint. (Id.) Mannsbart, Spira, Davis, and Yoram Rubanenko, an Executive Vice President and Chief Operations Officer, did not learn that Plaintiff had recorded Tuggle until at least February 2023. (Id.) Spira and Davis then reviewed Plaintiff’s conduct and the information they had obtained. (Id.) They concluded that Plaintiff had recorded a coworker without her consent, that he had been dishonest about Mannsbart shoving him and filing the police report, that he had spread

3 Plaintiff sued Costco twice before alleging employment discrimination. Loggins v. Costco Wholesale Corp., No. 2:17-CV-2688, 2019 WL 2203120 (W.D. Tenn. May 21, 2019); Loggins v. Costco Wholesale Corp., No. 2:22-CV-02026-TLP-tmp, 2024 WL 5486270 (W.D. Tenn. Jan. 10, 2024).

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Dennis Loggins v. Costco Wholesale Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennis-loggins-v-costco-wholesale-corporation-tnwd-2025.