RULING
JAMES J. BRADY, District Judge.
Before the court are the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment. (Doc. 42 & 43). An opposition and reply have been filed with respect to both motions. Additionally, Columbia Sussex has brought two motions to strike declarations submitted by the EEOC in opposition to Columbia Sussex’s motion for summary judgment. (Docs. 49 & 50). The EEOC has filed oppositions to both motions to strike. This Court’s jurisdiction exists pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331
et seq.
Oral argument with respect to the above pending motions is not necessary.
Background
The EEOC claims that Columbia Sussex, d/b/a Sheraton Downtown Convention Center Hotel/Belle of Baton Rouge Casino unlawfully terminated Richard Knight in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Specifically, the EEOC alleges that Mr. Knight was terminated because of his sex and in retaliation for complaining of disparate treatment based on sex.
The EEOC asserts that the alleged
unlawful employment practices were done intentionally and with malice or reckless indifference to Mr. Knight’s federally protected rights and seeks compensatory damages, including back wages, front pay, and damages for emotional distress, as well as punitive damages.
Mr. Knight was employed by defendant as a Banquet Manager. The EEOC asserts that during a “stand up” meeting on the morning of October 30, 2006, the defendant’s General Manager, Tony Dughaish discriminated and retaliated against Mr. Knight.
According to the EEOC, Renee Rice,
the Food and Beverage Manager, complained to Mr. Dughaish during the meeting about his behavior toward managers. The EEOC asserts that Mr. Dughaish ordered Ms. Rice into his office and she refused, requesting that a Human Resources representative be present. Mr. Knight allegedly also complained about Mr. Dughaish’s treatment of managers and was also ordered into Mr. Dughaish’s office. Like Ms. Rice, Mr. Knight stated he would not go without a Human Resources representative. Mr. Dughaish then terminated Mr. Knight. The EEOC asserts that Mr. Knight and Ms. Rice were similarly situated employees and that the disparate treatment afforded them by Mr. Dughaish evidences discrimination on the basis of sex. Additionally, the EEOC asserts that Mr. Knight was terminated in retaliation for his complaint to Mr. Dughaish that he was treating Ms. Rice more favorably because she was a woman.
Columbia Sussex argues that Mr. Knight and Ms. Rice were not similarly situated employees and therefore the termination of Mr. Knight cannot be compared with the retention of Ms. Rice, despite the fact that both complained to Mr. Dughaish about his behavior toward managers and both refused to go into Mr. Dughaish’s office without a Human Resources representative. In support of this argument, Columbia Sussex asserts that Mr. Knight had a poor performance record with Columbia Sussex and was actually informally fired by Mr. Dughaish two days prior to the stand up meeting for poor performance. Columbia Sussex asserts that while Ms. Rice was a good employee who wanted to speak with Mr. Dughaish about his behavior, Mr. Knight was a poor employee with whom Mr. Dughaish had to speak on October 30 in order to formalize the October 28 termination decision. Columbia Sussex also argues that Mr. Knight’s complaints about disparate treatment occurred
after
Mr. Dughaish terminated him and therefore temporally could not form the basis of a retaliation claim. Finally, Columbia Sussex argues that this suit should be dismissed based on the EEOC’s alleged failure to engage in conciliation efforts.
Analysis
Disparate Treatment
Discrimination
The Fifth Circuit has explained the legal standard in Title VII discrimination cases as follows:
The plaintiff must establish a prima facie case that the defendant made an employment decision that was motivated by a protected factor. Once established, the defendant bears the burden of producing evidence that its employment decision was based on a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason. The burden then shifts back to the plaintiff to prove that the defendant’s proffered reasons were a pretext for discrimination. But, if the defendant has offered a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for its action, the presumption of discrimination derived from the plaintiffs prima facie case “simply drops out of the picture,” and “the ultimate question [is] discrimination vel non.”
Here, the EEOC seeks to establish its prima facie case of discrimination by establishing disparate treatment of two similarly situated employees. In order “to establish disparate treatment a plaintiff must show that the employer ‘gave preferential treatment to [another] employee under “nearly identical” circumstances ....’”
Columbia Sussex argues that the EEOC cannot make out its prima facie case in this way because the circumstances surrounding Mr. Knight’s termination were not nearly identical to the circumstances regarding Ms. Rice’s employment. Columbia Sussex argues that Mr. Knight was fired for poor performance. As support for this argument, Columbia Sussex cites the deposition testimony of Ryan Parker, who was employed by Columbia Sussex as the Regional Food and Beverage Director at the time surrounding Mr. Knight’s termination.
Mr. Parker states that he personally witnessed Mr. Knight’s job performance and observed Mr. Knight to be “aloof, not in his work areas, not where he needed to be, not in control of his staff ...”
Mr. Parker stated that he reported his concerns to the General Manager, Mr. Dughaish, and “made the recommendation that Mr. Knight was unfit to lead the banquet department....”
Columbia Sussex also argues that Mr. Knight’s own deposition testimony makes it clear that he was fired for poor performance prior to the October 30 stand up meeting. According to Mr. Knight, Mr. Dughaish asked Mr. Knight and Gaynell Richard, a supervisor under Mr. Knight in the banquet department, to come to his office on October 28, 2006. According to Mr. Knight:
It was like overrunning when I’m trying to tell him exactly what our plans are, you know, be professional, be direct, definitive [sic] exactly what we were going to do, what happened here, but this is how we’re going to fix it. I wasn’t allowed to do that. So I probably became frustrated and told him, you know, “Tony, if you just don’t like the job I’m doing, why don’t you fire me?” He said, “Give me your keys.” At that point we were at — probably at the banquet door. Could have been half open.
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RULING
JAMES J. BRADY, District Judge.
Before the court are the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment. (Doc. 42 & 43). An opposition and reply have been filed with respect to both motions. Additionally, Columbia Sussex has brought two motions to strike declarations submitted by the EEOC in opposition to Columbia Sussex’s motion for summary judgment. (Docs. 49 & 50). The EEOC has filed oppositions to both motions to strike. This Court’s jurisdiction exists pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331
et seq.
Oral argument with respect to the above pending motions is not necessary.
Background
The EEOC claims that Columbia Sussex, d/b/a Sheraton Downtown Convention Center Hotel/Belle of Baton Rouge Casino unlawfully terminated Richard Knight in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Specifically, the EEOC alleges that Mr. Knight was terminated because of his sex and in retaliation for complaining of disparate treatment based on sex.
The EEOC asserts that the alleged
unlawful employment practices were done intentionally and with malice or reckless indifference to Mr. Knight’s federally protected rights and seeks compensatory damages, including back wages, front pay, and damages for emotional distress, as well as punitive damages.
Mr. Knight was employed by defendant as a Banquet Manager. The EEOC asserts that during a “stand up” meeting on the morning of October 30, 2006, the defendant’s General Manager, Tony Dughaish discriminated and retaliated against Mr. Knight.
According to the EEOC, Renee Rice,
the Food and Beverage Manager, complained to Mr. Dughaish during the meeting about his behavior toward managers. The EEOC asserts that Mr. Dughaish ordered Ms. Rice into his office and she refused, requesting that a Human Resources representative be present. Mr. Knight allegedly also complained about Mr. Dughaish’s treatment of managers and was also ordered into Mr. Dughaish’s office. Like Ms. Rice, Mr. Knight stated he would not go without a Human Resources representative. Mr. Dughaish then terminated Mr. Knight. The EEOC asserts that Mr. Knight and Ms. Rice were similarly situated employees and that the disparate treatment afforded them by Mr. Dughaish evidences discrimination on the basis of sex. Additionally, the EEOC asserts that Mr. Knight was terminated in retaliation for his complaint to Mr. Dughaish that he was treating Ms. Rice more favorably because she was a woman.
Columbia Sussex argues that Mr. Knight and Ms. Rice were not similarly situated employees and therefore the termination of Mr. Knight cannot be compared with the retention of Ms. Rice, despite the fact that both complained to Mr. Dughaish about his behavior toward managers and both refused to go into Mr. Dughaish’s office without a Human Resources representative. In support of this argument, Columbia Sussex asserts that Mr. Knight had a poor performance record with Columbia Sussex and was actually informally fired by Mr. Dughaish two days prior to the stand up meeting for poor performance. Columbia Sussex asserts that while Ms. Rice was a good employee who wanted to speak with Mr. Dughaish about his behavior, Mr. Knight was a poor employee with whom Mr. Dughaish had to speak on October 30 in order to formalize the October 28 termination decision. Columbia Sussex also argues that Mr. Knight’s complaints about disparate treatment occurred
after
Mr. Dughaish terminated him and therefore temporally could not form the basis of a retaliation claim. Finally, Columbia Sussex argues that this suit should be dismissed based on the EEOC’s alleged failure to engage in conciliation efforts.
Analysis
Disparate Treatment
Discrimination
The Fifth Circuit has explained the legal standard in Title VII discrimination cases as follows:
The plaintiff must establish a prima facie case that the defendant made an employment decision that was motivated by a protected factor. Once established, the defendant bears the burden of producing evidence that its employment decision was based on a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason. The burden then shifts back to the plaintiff to prove that the defendant’s proffered reasons were a pretext for discrimination. But, if the defendant has offered a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for its action, the presumption of discrimination derived from the plaintiffs prima facie case “simply drops out of the picture,” and “the ultimate question [is] discrimination vel non.”
Here, the EEOC seeks to establish its prima facie case of discrimination by establishing disparate treatment of two similarly situated employees. In order “to establish disparate treatment a plaintiff must show that the employer ‘gave preferential treatment to [another] employee under “nearly identical” circumstances ....’”
Columbia Sussex argues that the EEOC cannot make out its prima facie case in this way because the circumstances surrounding Mr. Knight’s termination were not nearly identical to the circumstances regarding Ms. Rice’s employment. Columbia Sussex argues that Mr. Knight was fired for poor performance. As support for this argument, Columbia Sussex cites the deposition testimony of Ryan Parker, who was employed by Columbia Sussex as the Regional Food and Beverage Director at the time surrounding Mr. Knight’s termination.
Mr. Parker states that he personally witnessed Mr. Knight’s job performance and observed Mr. Knight to be “aloof, not in his work areas, not where he needed to be, not in control of his staff ...”
Mr. Parker stated that he reported his concerns to the General Manager, Mr. Dughaish, and “made the recommendation that Mr. Knight was unfit to lead the banquet department....”
Columbia Sussex also argues that Mr. Knight’s own deposition testimony makes it clear that he was fired for poor performance prior to the October 30 stand up meeting. According to Mr. Knight, Mr. Dughaish asked Mr. Knight and Gaynell Richard, a supervisor under Mr. Knight in the banquet department, to come to his office on October 28, 2006. According to Mr. Knight:
It was like overrunning when I’m trying to tell him exactly what our plans are, you know, be professional, be direct, definitive [sic] exactly what we were going to do, what happened here, but this is how we’re going to fix it. I wasn’t allowed to do that. So I probably became frustrated and told him, you know, “Tony, if you just don’t like the job I’m doing, why don’t you fire me?” He said, “Give me your keys.” At that point we were at — probably at the banquet door. Could have been half open. I don’t remember that.
At that point shortly thereafter, he said, “Look, Richard, if you want to see, I’m going to show you how to do banquets.” I left my keys and phone on my desk, came back out. We had a meeting with the employees. I asked Gaynell, I said, “What did Tony do with my phone and keys?” She said, “They’re on the desk,” so I went back in my office and got my phone and my keys and worked the rest of the day.
Based on this portion of Mr. Knight’s deposition testimony, Columbia Sussex asserts Mr. Knight was a poor performer who had been informally fired prior to the stand up meeting on October 30, 2006.
In contrast to Mr. Knight, Columbia Sussex asserts that Ms. Rice “was an exemplary employee”
and that “there is
no
evidence Dughaish had any similar issues with Renee Rice at any time.”
However, Ms. Rice states in a declaration that Dughaish “threatened my job on many occasions. An example of the ways in which he would do so included his telling me that there were seventeen exits to the hotel.”
Although Columbia Sussex has moved to strike Ms. Rice’s declaration as vague, conclusory, and speculative, this Court agrees
with the EEOC that Ms. Rice is “competent to attest to the inferences she drew from Dughaish’s words and demeanor”
and that Columbia Sussex “will be free at trial to try to impeach Ms. Rice and to argue that she lied when she attested that Dughaish threatened her on many occasions.”
Thus, this Court finds that Ms. Rice’s declaration creates a factual question as to whether Mr. Dughaish had any issues with Ms. Rice as an employee.
Further, the portions of Mr. Knightfs deposition testimony on which Columbia Sussex relies for its assertion that Mr. Knight was fired prior to the October 30, 2006 stand up meeting do not definitively show the “informal termination.” Indeed, it appears that Mr. Knight was allowed to work the remainder of the evening on October 28 as well as his shift the next day.
This Court finds that Ms. Rice’s declaration, combined with ambiguous nature of the October 28, 2006 meeting, evidence a factual issue as to whether Ms. Rice and Mr. Knight were similarly situated on October 30, 2006.
The EEOC also argues it has established a prima facie case of discrimination based on the fact that Mr. Knight was replaced by a female, Melissa Daigle.
However, Roger Goldesberry, who took over management of the hotel/easino in an interim capacity after Mr. Dughaish was terminated in December of 2006, stated that he “offered the Banquet Manager position to Melissa Daigle....”
Ms. Daigle confirms in her deposition that “Mr. Goldesberry offered me the [Banquet Manager] position and I accepted it.”
Thus, Mr. Knight’s replacement by Ms. Daigle does nothing to prove or disprove Mr. Dughaish’s discriminatory animus.
Retaliation
To establish a prima facie claim of retaliation, a plaintiff must show that (1) she engaged in Title VII protected activity; (2) defendant carried out an adverse employment action; and (3) there was a causal connection between plaintiffs protected activity and defendant’s adverse action.
The EEOC argues that under Fifth Circuit precedent, when there is close temporal proximity between the protected activity and the adverse employment action, “a reasonable trier of fact is free to infer retaliatory motivation.”
The EEOC asserts that
Dughaish fired Mr. Knight literally within seconds or minutes of Mr. Knight’s complaining of the fact that Dughaish was treating Ms. Rice better than he was treating Mr. Knight, because of her sex. This temporal gap between the protected activity and the discharge is as small as it could possibly be.
While Columbia Sussex “vehemently denies that Knight engaged in any protected activity,” it states that, Mr. Knight’s “testimony that he complained about the way he was treated as compared to Rice must be accepted for purposes of this motion.”
Columbia Sussex also admits that Mr. Knight suffered “the ultimate employment action of termination.”
However, Columbia Sussex argues that Mr. Knight cannot make out a prima facie case of retaliation because his deposition testimony clearly shows he complained about disparate treatment
after
his termination at the stand up meeting. Thus, defendant asserts that no causal connection between the protected activity and the adverse employment action exists, and that the EEOC’s “temporal proximity” argument is disingenuous. Columbia Sussex cites the following testimony of Mr. Knight to support its assertion that Mr. Knight was terminated before he complained of being treated differently from Ms. Rice:
A: I remember speaking about negative, stand-up meetings, being belittled in from of my staff
Q: Okay. And Tony’s response to that? A: “Come to my office.”
Q: And your response was that not without an HR representative?
A: Correct.
Q: And how did he respond to that?
A: He said, “Richard, come to my office.” I said, “Not without an HR director.”
Q: And did the meeting continue?
A: No. He repeated himself again. I said, “Not without an HR director” and he said, “Okay. You’re fired.” Q: And what did you — did you have any further conversation?
A: I told him, I said, “You requested Renee to go to your office, and you did nothing, and you’re requesting me to go to your office, and you’re firing me.” He said, ‘Tes.” I asked him again the exact same thing. He said, “I’m the general manager. I can do anything I want.” I repeated myself. I said, “You requested Renee to go to the office. She refused. You did nothing. You requested me to go to your office, you did nothing, and now I’m fired?” He said, ‘Tes. I told you I’m the GM. I can do anything I want.”
Columbia Sussex insists that Mr. Knight’s above testimony makes it clear that Mr. Knight was terminated
before
he complained about alleged disparate treatment.
In opposition, the EEOC submits the declaration of Mr. Knight, which it asserts shows that Mr. Knight “specifically noted that Dughaish was giving better treatment to a female,
before
Dughaish fired him.”
Columbia Sussex moves to strike the portion of Dughaish’s declaration upon which the EEOC relies, arguing that the relevant assertions “contradict Knight’s prior sworn testimony.”
Columbia Sussex argues that the objective of Mr. Knight’s declaration is to “blur the line regarding when Knight made his so-called complaints of preferential treatment” and that the relevant portions of the declarations are so inconsistent with Mr. Knight’s deposition that they “should be disregarded as ‘sham’ testimony.”
When this Court compares Mr. Knight’s deposition testimony with his declaration statements, it does not find the two to be so inconsistent as to qualify as sham testimony. Instead, any such inconsistencies, to the extent Columbia Sussex can convince a jury they exist, go to the credibility and weight of Mr. Knight’s testimony rather than its admissibility. As the Fifth Circuit has explained:
In reviewing a motion for summary judgment the court must consider all the evidence before it, including affidavits that conflict with deposition testimony. A genuine issue of material may be raised by such an affidavit “even if it conflicts with earlier testimony in the party’s deposition.”
Kennett-Murray Corp. v. Bone,
622 F.2d 887, 893 (5th Cir.1980) (citing 6
Moore’s Federal Practice
¶56-15[4] at 56-522 (2d Ed.)).... To the extent they exist, discrepancies in those averments present credibility issues properly put to the trier-of-faet.
KennetC-Murray,
622
F.2d at 894. Credibility assessments are not fit grist for the summary judgment mill.
Therefore, this Court denies Columbia Sussex’s motion to strike paragraphs 32 and 33 of Mr. Knight’s declaration. This Court finds that the EEOC has established a genuine issue of material fact regarding the timing and causal connection between Mr. Knight’s alleged protected activity and his termination.
Conciliation
Prior to bringing a civil action, the EEOC is statutorily obligated to “endeav- or to eliminate any such alleged unlawful employment practice by informal methods of conference, conciliation, and persuasion.”
The Fifth Circuit stated in
EEOC v. Agro Distribution, LLC
that a good faith conciliation effort requires the EEOC to:
(1) outline to the employer the reasonable cause for its belief that Title VII has been violated; (2) offer an opportunity for voluntary compliance; and (3) respond in a reasonable and flexible manner to the reasonable and flexible attitudes of the employer.
In
Agro,
the EEOC failed to respond to employer’s concerns about the methods by which the EEOC investigator conducted an on-site investigation, instead allowing the investigator to remain in charge of the investigation. The investigator then issued a summary of evidence to the employer, Argo, which contained a number of inaccurate facts. Based on this inaccurate report, the EEOC determined a violation of the ADA had occurred and sent a conciliation agreement to Argo demanding reinstatement, back-pay, medical expenses and $120,000.00 in compensatory damages. Argo left a message with the investigator requesting a meeting; however, the next day, EEOC sent a letter to employer stating conciliation had failed. Argo again requested a meeting and clarification regarding the EEOC’s settlement requirements. The EEOC failed to respond. Argo then offered $3500.00 in settlement and almost ten months later, the EEOC rejected the employer’s offer and thereafter filed suit.
Although the court opted to rule on the merits, it noted that under the particular facts, “dismissing the case and awarding attorneys’ fees for the failure to conciliate would not have constituted an abuse of discretion.”
However, in
instances where the EEOC has acted in good faith but prematurely terminated negotiations, a court is “free to impose a stay »
Thus, “the fundamental question is the reasonableness and responsiveness of the EEOC’s conduct.”
Columbia Sussex argues that the EEOC ignored its request for an in-person meeting and refused to give it further information as to the EEOC’s damage calculations. Columbia Sussex asserts that the EEOC ignored the differing circumstances between Rice and Knight and that had the EEOC fulfilled its “continuing duty to examine the merits of its case,” it would have dismissed the suit as having no merit.
Finally, Columbia Sussex argues that the EEOC continues to improperly seek damages for emotional distress despite the fact that it has no medical evidence of such distress.
In opposition, the EEOC argues that it did fulfill its responsibilities to defendant. It asserts that the Louisiana Commission on Human Rights (LCHR) investigated the situation and determined that unlawful discrimination occurred. The EEOC states that LCHR then issued a proposed conciliation agreement which stated that Columbia Sussex’s failure to contact the commission within ten days would indicate an unwillingness to participate in conciliation.
The EEOC asserts that defendant contacted LCHR more than ten days later asking it to reverse its determination; however, from the letters submitted by the EEOC it is unclear whether Columbia Sussex responded to the determination and conciliation agreement outside the ten-day window.
In any event, the EEOC denied Columbia Sussex’s request for reconsideration on May 31, 2007.
The EEOC states that it also invited Columbia Sussex to participate in conciliation but Columbia Sussex did not timely contact it regarding conciliation.
Finally, the EEOC seems to assert that any conciliation efforts at this point would prove fruitless. As it asserts:
LCHR and the EEOC have consistently proposed reinstatement as an appropriate and key remedy in this matter. Defendant has consistently refused, to the present date, to even consider reinstating Mr. Knight. As such, there is clear
ly an impasse, by virtue of Defendant’s position, which would prevent conciliation of this matter.
It appears to this Court that defendant’s argument as to conciliation is at heart an argument that the EEOC should have realized the merits of this case are lacking, dismissed the case, and never sought damages. Considering that this Court cannot dismiss the EEOC’s charges at this stage because of factual disputes, we cannot find that the merits of this suit are so insufficient. Further, it appears that the EEOC’s efforts in this case do not sink to the level found in
Agro.
While it appears that the EEOC issued a “Notice of Conciliation Failure” one day after Columbia Sussex requested a meeting to discuss the factual basis of the EEOC’s determination and its request for damages, it also appears that an impasse had arisen as to the threshold question of whether a violation had occurred. Given that Columbia Sussex and the EEOC do seem to have reached an impasse regarding the threshold issue of whether a Title VII violation occurred, this Court agrees with the EEOC that conciliation efforts at this point would be futile. This Court finds that the EEOC fulfilled its duty to conciliate with defendant.
Conclusion
For the reasons discussed above, both motions for summary judgment are DENIED. (Docs. 42
&
43). Columbia Sussex’s motions to strike the declarations of Ms. Rice and Mr. Knight are DENIED. (Docs. 49 & 50).