Glover v. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles US, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 27, 2021
Docket3:18-cv-00868
StatusUnknown

This text of Glover v. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles US, LLC (Glover v. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles US, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glover v. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles US, LLC, (N.D. Ohio 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

Ericka Parker, as Bankruptcy Trustee for Donnie Glover, Case No. 3:18-cv-868

Plaintiff,

v. MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

FCA US LLC, et al.,

Defendants.

I. INTRODUCTION Defendants Mike Sawaya, Tim Alexander, Mark Epley, and UAW Local 12 seek summary judgment on all claims asserted against them by Ericka Parker, as Bankruptcy Trustee for Donnie Glover. (Doc. No. 69). Plaintiff filed a brief in opposition, (Doc. No. 75), and Defendants filed a brief in reply. (Doc. No. 77). For the reasons stated below, I grant Defendants’ motion. II. BACKGROUND Glover began working for FCA US LLC,1 and became a member of UAW Local 12, in May 2013. She held several positions before being selected as a team leader in the powder sand department in October 2015. (Doc. No. 60 at 13). Team leaders acted as mentors for the other employees in the department and covered for team members who were on break. (Id. at 13, 17).

1 FCA previously was named as a defendant as well. (Doc. No. 40 at 2). After FCA moved for summary judgment, (Doc. No. 69), Plaintiff and FCA stipulated to the dismissal with prejudice of Plaintiff’s claims against FCA. (Doc. No. 74). On August 15, 2016, Glover asked Sawaya, her union steward, for help with filling out a form requesting permission to take vacation time without pay. (Id. at 38). Sawaya told Glover to meet him in the employee break room, which had a computer desk for the paint shop team leaders to use. (Id. at 38-39). Glover was on the break room phone with one of her supervisors when Sawaya entered the room and sat down at the desk. (Id.). Glover alleges that, after she finished her phone call, she sat down at the desk and Sawaya made an inappropriate comment to her about

wanting to “rub [her] down.” (Id.). Glover told Sawaya he had better not do that, and Sawaya said she had him sitting “on hard.” (Id. at 30). Glover made a phone call to another supervisor, Doug Zipfel. (Id. at 26, 30). During that phone call, Sawaya reached over and rubbed his hand along the inside of Glover’s right thigh, over the top of her clothes. (Id. at 30). Glover jumped up, slammed the phone down, and told Sawaya to leave. (Id. at 25). For his part, Sawaya denies making any inappropriate comments or touching Glover. (Doc. No. 66 at 5). At the time of the incident, two union committeemen (Brian Sims and Tim Alexander) stated Sawaya told them he brushed Glover’s kneecap. (Doc. No. 67-4 at 3). Shortly after Sawaya left the break room, Glover went to the union offices to talk with someone about what had happened. She found Sims in his office and explained to him what occurred. (Doc. No. 60 at 40). Sims recalls asking Glover three times during this conversation if she wanted to report the incident to the human resources department, but Glover declined each time. (Doc. No. 69-10 at 3).

While Glover and Sims were talking, Sawaya called Glover on her cell phone. Glover asserts Sawaya asked her if she had gone to HR and told her he did not want his wife and kids to find out. (Doc. No. 60 at 40). When the phone call ended, Glover asked Sims if he could take her back to the paint department or allow her to go home. (Id.). Sims replied he could not take her back and that she needed to ask her union steward (Sawaya) for permission to leave before the end of her shift. (Id.). Glover left the union offices and began walking back to the paint department. Sawaya met her in the pathway connecting the two locations. (Id.). Glover asserts Sawaya asked her if he violated her and, when Glover responded yes and said she should have hit Sawaya, Sawaya responded “you should have.” (Id. at 41). Glover asked Sawaya for permission to leave for the day,

but Sawaya said no. The two talked for four or five minutes before Glover returned to her work- station. (Id.). After her shift, Glover called Alexander to tell him about the incident with Sawaya. (Id.). Glover told Alexander she could no longer work with Sawaya as her union steward because she didn’t feel comfortable or safe. (Id.). She told Alexander she wanted to go to HR but “did not want to be retaliated against.” (Id.). Glover testified Alexander told her he understood because “you don’t want to be known as the lying [bitch] who gets the union steward fired.” (Id.). Alexander denied making that comment or telling Glover that Sawaya might get fired if Glover reported him to HR. (Doc. No. 61 at 9). Alexander testified he offered to put Glover in contact with HR but she declined because she did not want to get Sawaya in trouble. (Id. at 6). At Glover’s request, Alexander arranged for her to meet with Mark Epley, the then- chairman of the UAW Local 12. Glover met with Epley, Alexander, and others to discuss the incident with Sawaya. (Doc. No. 60 at 42-43). At one point in the meeting, Epley told Glover he

would walk her over to HR to report the incident, but Glover did not go at that time. (Id. at 44). Epley also told Glover she would receive a decrease in pay and overtime if she moved departments because she would no longer be a team leader. (Doc. No. 63 at 16). He advised Glover to take a few days and let him know if she did not want to be transferred to the assembly department, but he did not hear back from Glover. (Id.). After Glover, Epley, and the others discussed Glover moving out of the paint department, Glover was asked if Sawaya could join the meeting. (Doc. No. 60 at 43). Glover agreed, and Sawaya entered the room. Glover asserts he apologized for the incident and told her he did not want her to leave the department. (Id.). FCA then transferred Glover to the assembly department. After her transfer, Glover no longer was a team leader and therefore she did not receive the additional overtime and $1 per hour

pay increase provided to team leaders. After she was transferred, Glover was contacted by Lynn Harris-Gardner, the UAW civil rights committee chairperson. (Id. at 44). Glover told Harris-Gardner what happened with Sawaya, and Harris-Gardner suggested that Glover talk to Tonya Tooson, a representative with the Employee Assistance Program. Tooson told Glover she should contact Larry Price in the HR department to discuss the incident with Sawaya. (Id. at 45). Glover did so and later also discussed the incident with another HR employee, Adrian Baker. (Id.). Baker interviewed several people about the incident and what occurred afterward, including Glover, Epley, Alexander, Sims, and Sawaya. Baker’s “investigation revealed that Glover met with several people in the Union and stated that she wanted to be moved out of the paint department as resolution to her complaint against” Sawaya. (Doc. No. 67-4 at 5). “Glover was moved from the paint department to assembly at her request with full knowledge that she would lose her team leader pay and possibly some of the overtime hours she was accustomed to.” (Id.). Baker noted Sims and

Alexander both stated that Sawaya told them he did not touch Glover’s thigh in a sexual manner but had touched her knee. (Id. at 9, 12). Sawaya subsequently was given a verbal warning for engaging in conduct which “could be construed” as a violation of FCA’s policy against sexual harassment. (Doc. No. 63-6 at 1). On September 18, 2016, while Baker’s investigation was ongoing, Glover filed a grievance with the union regarding the incident with Sawaya and the events that followed. (Doc. No. 61-10 at 5-7). She asserted she was coerced into accepting the transfer to the assembly department and wanted to be reinstated to her team leader position. (Id. at 7). She also stated she did not want to be harassed or retaliated against. (Id.). Epley responded by letter, stating the union had determined her grievance did not have

merit because it was her “choice to move into the new area, and . . .

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Glover v. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles US, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glover-v-fiat-chrysler-automobiles-us-llc-ohnd-2021.