Eric Phillipson v. Chad F. Wolf

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 21, 2020
Docket19-3131
StatusUnpublished

This text of Eric Phillipson v. Chad F. Wolf (Eric Phillipson v. Chad F. Wolf) 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
Eric Phillipson v. Chad F. Wolf, (7th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Chicago, Illinois 60604

Submitted October 6, 2020* Decided October 21, 2020

Before

DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judge

MICHAEL B. BRENNAN, Circuit Judge

MICHAEL Y. SCUDDER, Circuit Judge

No. 19-3131

ERIC PHILLIPSON, Appeal from the United States District Plaintiff-Appellant, Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division

v. No. 14-cv-08138

CHAD F. WOLF, Andrea R. Wood, Defendant-Appellee. Judge.

ORDER

Eric Phillipson, now 53 years old, believes that he was fired from his job as a planner for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) based on his age and in retaliation for his complaints about discrimination, in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621–634. The district court entered

* On September 18, 2020, we granted the parties’ joint motion to waive oral argument. This appeal was therefore submitted on the briefs and the record. See FED. R. APP. P. 34(f); CIR. R. 34(e). No. 19-3131 Page 2

summary judgment in favor of FEMA, ruling that no evidence supported an inference of age-based discrimination or retaliation. On appeal, Phillipson contends the district court improperly credited FEMA’s version of events over his own. But none of the evidence on which he relies creates a material factual dispute, so we affirm.

I

As a preliminary matter, the district court ruled that Phillipson failed to properly dispute FEMA’s statement of material facts under Local Rule 56.1 and therefore deemed several of those facts admitted. Phillipson does not dispute this ruling on appeal. Because the district court may reasonably enforce compliance with such rules, we rely on those admitted facts, though in the light most favorable to Phillipson. See Flint v. City of Belvidere, 791 F.3d 764, 767 (7th Cir. 2015).

A

Phillipson, an Army veteran, began working as a senior planner at FEMA in 2010 when he was 43 years old. He reported to Gus Wulfkuhle, an operational planning branch chief, and Paul Preusse, the director of response. His first year of employment appeared to go well. He testified he was a keynote speaker at a conference, successfully completed several high-profile assignments, and received superior work evaluations.

Late in 2011, however, he exchanged tense emails with Denise Dukes, the chief of FEMA’s specialized planning section, whom he accused of wrongdoing (he said she fabricated an issue regarding invoices for contractor payments) and believed should be prosecuted. Dukes complained that she viewed Phillipson’s emails as abusive and said she would report him to the Equal Employment Opportunity office. In response, Wulfkuhle warned Phillipson not to communicate with other employees with threats and accusations.

A year later, in December 2012, Phillipson’s behavior was again the subject of complaint by colleagues. Wulfkuhle and Preusse received a memorandum from the chief of staff at FEMA’s New York office about a scene Phillipson had created while traveling there in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy. When Phillipson was brought into the field office to account for a skirmish with a security guard in FEMA’s parking garage, he was argumentative and raised his hand and voice at security and supervisory staff. The chief of staff characterized the incident as a security threat and recommended disciplinary action. Wulfkuhle, after investigating and reviewing witness statements, officially reprimanded Phillipson for inappropriate behavior in that No. 19-3131 Page 3

incident, as well as in the email exchange with Dukes, and another instance when Phillipson raised his voice at a colleague upon learning that one of his travel vouchers was not reimbursed promptly.

Then, in the first part of 2013, Phillipson ran afoul of several office policies: He requested sick leave without explanation (and later without notifying his supervisors), did not submit proper documentation for travel reimbursement, had to redo several assignments, and misused his travel charge card (his card statement reflected a charge for a meal while he was not on official travel, and he missed nine payments on the card’s balance).

In April, Wulfkuhle took further disciplinary action against Phillipson. He issued a notice of proposed suspension based on Phillipson’s behavior in New York and his misuse of his travel charge card. Later, he began denying Phillipson’s sick-leave requests when Phillipson failed to check in with a supervisor before leaving the office. Preusse reviewed Wulfkuhle’s proposal and decided against suspension, but he warned Phillipson that future issues with his behavior would result in disciplinary action “up to and including termination.”

That same month, Phillipson filed an administrative grievance, making general allegations of discrimination and asserting he had been reprimanded and threatened with suspension in retaliation for pointing out waste and mismanagement within the agency. His union representatives stepped in to try to negotiate resolutions to his complaints, and an EEO counselor later informed Wulfkuhle that Phillipson had brought allegations of discrimination against him.

In July, Phillipson acted out a verbal rage in a bathroom at work. An investigation into potential workplace violence was carried out by Richard Amburgey, FEMA’s regional security officer, who interviewed six employees about Phillipson’s behavior. Four employees reported that they felt uncomfortable around Phillipson because of his frequent ranting; one said that “when I am talking to [Phillipson], he is very disgruntled and I feel like he is going to stab me in the neck.”

In mid-August, after Amburgey’s investigation, Phillipson filed a formal complaint of age discrimination. Wulfkuhle, he asserted, had wrongly denied his requests for sick leave, pursued unwarranted disciplinary measures against him, and made false and defamatory statements about him. No. 19-3131 Page 4

A month later, Wulfkuhle evaluated Phillipson’s performance as “less than expected” based on deficiencies in the areas of completing tasks, customer service, and coordination. Negotiations with Phillipson’s union representatives ensued, and Wulfkuhle upgraded his evaluation of Phillipson’s performance to be “on track.”

But over the next year Phillipson’s relationship with Wulfkuhle deteriorated. In February 2014, after further negotiations with union representatives, Wulfkuhle revised his reprimand letter for the parking-garage incident by excising references to the two other cited incidents. When he summoned Phillipson to his office to pick up the updated letter, Phillipson refused and accused him of staging a “farce.” And later that month, the two men clashed over a white paper that Wulfkuhle asked Phillipson to draft with regard to specific areas in which FEMA needed national policy guidance. Phillipson instead wrote a paper criticizing Wulfkuhle and Preusse as incompetent. When Wulfkuhle asked him to revise the report, Phillipson refused and accused him of malfeasance and mismanagement. Phillipson’s recalcitrance prompted Wulfkuhle in March to again propose suspending him. Phillipson lashed out that Wulfkuhle was “despicable” and a “coward.” Later, he accused Wulfkuhle of perjury and malfeasance in his responses to questions about work assignments.

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Eric Phillipson v. Chad F. Wolf, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eric-phillipson-v-chad-f-wolf-ca7-2020.