Eke v. CaridianBCT, Inc.

490 F. App'x 156
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 31, 2012
Docket11-1483
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 490 F. App'x 156 (Eke v. CaridianBCT, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eke v. CaridianBCT, Inc., 490 F. App'x 156 (10th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

STEPHEN H. ANDERSON, Circuit Judge.

Deborah Eke appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of CaridianBCT, Inc., on her discrimination and retaliation claims under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. *158 §§ 2000e-2(a)(l) and 2000e-3(a), and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. § 623. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm.

Background

Ms. Eke worked for CaridianBCT and its predecessor companies from 1979 until she was terminated on April 8, 2009. Her last job title was Finished Goods Inventory Specialist, and her duties included daily emails; telephone calls; incoming orders; allocation of orders; communications for forecasts; delivery; switching schedules; meetings; various weekly and daily reports; and on a monthly basis: manually gathering inventory and forecast information from the company’s world-wide operations, recording that information on a spreadsheet, and distributing it. Ms. Eke’s position at CaridianBCT fell under the Global Supply Chain group. She reported to Gary Alcala, who reported to Grace Mills, who was the director of the Global Supply Chain group.

The company decided to implement a new software system called Sales Inventory Operating Planning (SIOP). Both Ms. Mills and Mr. Alcala were on the SIOP implementation team, and Ms. Mills “owned” the process for implementing SIOP. She testified, “I implemented the process within the organization and the software to support it. I know every piece of what the software can accomplish.” App’x, Vol. I at 66. It is undisputed that SIOP would ultimately automate a portion of Ms. Eke’s job duties. Ms. Eke knew that it would automate her manual processes for gathering inventory and forecasts, but she considered that only one quarter of her job duties. Still, the SIOP automation issue concerned Ms. Eke. But when she expressed her unease to Mr. Alcala he repeatedly told her not to worry, that her job would be different, but she would still have a job. Mr. Alcala gave Ms. Eke these assurances as late as February or March of 2009.

Ms. Eke testified that in early 2009 it was obvious that the faltering economy was affecting CaridianBCT’s sales. She remembered that employees received a memo from the company’s President that addressed saving money, being efficient, and reducing costs. In response, there was talk among the employees about the potential for layoffs.

Craig Rinehardt, Senior Vice President of Operations at CaridianBCT, was Ms. Mill’s supervisor. At some point in February or early March 2009, he asked all the directors in his group, including Ms. Mills, to analyze their respective groups to determine if any positions could be eliminated. He referred to this process as a reduction in force (RIF). Ms. Mills had a meeting with her own management team to inform them there was going to be a company-wide RIF.

Ms. Mills testified that Mr. Rinehardt told her to look for opportunities for positions in her group that had redundancies. She considered redundancies to be job functions that were duplicated due to automation, or duties that could be absorbed into another function. Ms. Mills testified that, after looking at the entire Global Supply Chain group, she identified two positions that had redundancies: Ms. Eke’s job and Keith Chamber’s job. Mr. Chambers reported directly to Ms. Mills as a Strategic Sourcing Manager. Ms. Mills listed Ms. Eke and Mr. Chambers on a spreadsheet that she emailed to Mr. Rinehardt on March 9, 2009. Her email and the spreadsheet both indicated that the two positions listed were being eliminated. At Mr. Rinehardt’s request, another employee compiled a larger spreadsheet listing all the employees in Mr. Rine- *159 hardt’s group, including Ms. Eke, who had been identified for layoff in the RIF. Mr. Rinehardt received this spreadsheet by email on March 11, 2009. According to Mr. Rinehardt, the decisions regarding which employees would be included in the RIF were final at that time. Ultimately, over 200 employees were laid off by Cari-dianBCT in the RIF.

Ms. Mills testified that she alone made the decision to eliminate Ms. Eke’s position, based on her determination that SIOP would replace at least ninety percent of Ms. Eke’s job function. She made that assessment considering her knowledge, as the SIOP process owner, of everything that the software can accomplish, and her understanding of Ms. Eke’s job function. She testified that Mr. Alcala had previously described Ms. Eke’s job as updating spreadsheets of sales forecast information from the company’s operations around the world.

After receiving the direction from Mr. Rinehardt to find jobs that could be eliminated, Ms. Mills spoke only to him regarding terminating Ms. Eke. At her deposition two years later, Ms. Mills could not recall what she or Mr. Rinehardt had said. In making her decision, Ms. Mills did not speak to Mr. Alcala to obtain further information about Ms. Eke’s job duties, nor did she consult with him on whether to eliminate Ms. Eke’s position. She also did not inquire whether Ms. Eke had additional job duties that would need to be taken over by other employees or how Ms. Eke’s termination would affect her group. Ms. Mills testified that she did not examine any documents, such as Ms. Eke’s written job description or her past performance reviews, in deciding to eliminate Ms. Eke’s position, although that information was available to her. When asked what efforts she had made to find Ms. Eke another position at CaridianBCT, Ms. Mills stated that she did not have any open positions within her group, and she did not look for any open positions for Ms. Eke outside of her group.

Ms. Mills sent an email to John Banich, who was one of her peers at CaridianBCT, telling him that she had decided to eliminate Ms. Eke’s job. She did this as a courtesy to Mr. Banich because Ms. Eke supported Mr. Banich’s group. Ms. Mills told Mr. Alcala of her decision to terminate Ms. Eke “[a]t the time that it was ready to happen.” App’x, Vol. Ill at 188 (testimony by Mr. Alcala regarding when Ms. Mills told him about Ms. Eke’s job being eliminated).

On March 17, 2009, Jack Olsen, Ms. Eke’s attorney, sent an email to Mr. Alca-la, Mr. Banich, Randy Leonard, and the company’s Vice President of Human Resources. Messrs. Banich and Leonard were former supervisors of Ms. Eke. Mr. Olsen’s email stated, “This is to inform you that Deb Eke has retained Olsen & Brown LLC to investigate gender and age discrimination in her employment and treatment over recent months.” Id., Vol. I at 79. Mr. Olsen provided no further information regarding the nature of Ms. Eke’s discrimination allegations. She testified that this email was the first time she or anyone on her behalf had notified the company that she believed she was a victim of gender or age discrimination.

On April 8, 2009, Ms. Eke was called into a meeting by Ms. Mills. A representative from Human Resources was also present. Ms. Mills informed Ms. Eke that her job had been eliminated and someone handed Ms. Eke a letter from Mr. Rine-hardt.

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