Griego v. Lennox Industries Inc

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedMarch 28, 2023
Docket4:20-cv-01309
StatusUnknown

This text of Griego v. Lennox Industries Inc (Griego v. Lennox Industries Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griego v. Lennox Industries Inc, (E.D. Ark. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS CENTRAL DIVISION

STEPHEN GRIEGO PLAINTIFF

v. Case No. 4:20-CV-01309

LENNOX INDUSTRIES, INC. DEFENDANT

ORDER This case involves allegations of wrongful termination. Defendant Lennox Industries, Inc. fired Plaintiff Stephen Griego because, in Lennox’s view, Mr. Griego missed work too frequently. Mr. Griego says many of his absences were caused by attending medical appointments for his mental and physical disabilities. Mr. Griego thus contends that Lennox violated the Family and Medical Leave Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act by firing him. Lennox has moved for summary judgment.1 For the reasons given below, the Court GRANTS Lennox’s Motion. BACKGROUND2 Mr. Griego worked in Lennox’s Stuttgart, Arkansas, facility two separate times. His first stint of employment spanned from 2003 to 2017; Lennox terminated Mr. Griego for excessive absences. After he was fired by Lennox for the first time, Mr. Griego spent a little over one year working various jobs. Then, at the end of 2018, Lennox found itself extremely short-staffed. So

1 Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. (Doc. 33). 2 This Background Section is primarily composed of undisputed facts. To the extent there are genuine disputes of fact, the Court resolves them in favor of the nonmoving party, Mr. Griego. See Bruning v. City of Omaha, 6 F.4th 821, 824 (8th Cir. 2021). Resolving disputes in favor of the nonmoving party typically means adopting that party’s version of the disputed fact. In this case, however, Mr. Griego and his attorneys have made it somewhat difficult to pin down exactly what Mr. Griego considers the facts of this case to be. A large portion of Mr. Griego’s deposition testimony is him stating that he doesn’t remember specific information about his time at Lennox. See, e.g., Ex. 1 (Griego Dep.) to Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. (Doc. 40-1) at 39:4–7, 44:2–13, 54:16–25, 66:20–24, 84:17– 85:7, 89:3–7, 103:13–19. And Mr. Griego’s summary-judgment papers contain certain admissions and denials that are at the very least in tension with each other, if not directly conflicting. See Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Statement of Facts (Doc. 41) ¶¶ 40–46. Of the many possible readings of this record, the Court adopts the version that is the most favorable to Mr. Griego’s case. And even under that most favorable version of the record that a rational juror could reach, Lennox is still entitled to summary judgment. it rehired Mr. Griego. This second stint of employment lasted until October of 2019, when Mr. Griego was once again fired for (in Lennox’s view) a lackluster attendance record. Mr. Griego’s claims in this case are based solely on the second termination. But his first stint with Lennox and the interim period of time where he worked other jobs are nonetheless relevant. So the Court begins in 2003, when Mr. Griego first joined Lennox.

I. First Stint of Employment with Lennox Lennox first hired Mr. Griego in 2003.3 When he joined the company, Mr. Griego had the option of working as a “brazer” or an “assembler.”4 The record doesn’t quite explain the specifics of each job. It appears that brazing involves using fire (i.e., torches) and is a more preferable assignment than assembling.5 Mr. Griego didn’t have the benefit of that knowledge in 2003, however, and he chose to be an assembler.6 Assemblers and brazers each work on “lines,” which the Court understands to be assembly lines or something very similar to assembly lines. For the vast majority of his first stint of employment, Mr. Griego worked on one specific line and was primarily supervised by Phillip Bell.7 For the last few years of his first stint of employment, Mr. Griego was a “floater,” meaning that he was not permanently assigned to one particular line.8

Instead, his assigned line would regularly change as each line’s manpower needs fluctuated.9

3 Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Statement of Facts (Doc. 41) ¶ 23. 4 Ex. 1 (Griego Dep.) to Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. (Doc. 40-1) at 22:18–19. 5 Id. at 22:19–21, 67:17–24. 6 Id. at 22:19–21. 7 Id. at 24:5–21, 51:14–22. 8 Id. at 24:5–24. 9 Id. Mr. Griego’s time with Lennox got off to a rocky start. On one of his first days, Mr. Griego had a run-in with a line supervisor, Charles Brown.10 Mr. Brown saw Mr. Griego holding a brazing torch; Mr. Griego, an assembler, was not supposed to be using such torches.11 Mr. Brown tried to get Mr. Griego in trouble for improperly using the brazing torch.12 Mr. Griego explained that he had simply been handing the torch to a coworker who was a brazer and therefore needed the

torch.13 Apparently, this interaction made Mr. Brown feel stupid and, as a result, Mr. Brown then held an approximately fourteen-year grudge against Mr. Griego.14 Whenever Mr. Griego was assigned to Mr. Brown’s line (as a floater during the final years of Mr. Griego’s first stint of employment), Mr. Brown would berate Mr. Griego.15 Mr. Griego indicates that Mr. Brown’s behavior was fairly typical of how other line supervisors treated Mr. Griego.16 Mr. Griego’s displeasure with the way some of the line supervisors spoke to him did not impact the quality of his work. Mr. Griego says that he was a hard worker who got the job done.17 And there’s nothing in the record to dispute that, when he was at work, Mr. Griego generally did his job well. What did cause problems, however, was the fact that Mr. Griego missed a lot of

work.

10 Id. at 33:18–21, 67:15–68:12, 131:14–22. 11 See id. at 67:15–22. 12 Id. at 67:20–22. 13 Id. at 67:17–24, 131:14–21. 14 See id. at 131:14–22. The only rational read of the record is that this interaction with Mr. Brown took place “when [Mr. Griego] first started” his first stint of employment with Lennox. Id. at 67:17. Mr. Griego testified that he was only supervised by Mr. Brown when Mr. Griego was “still filling in” as a floater, and Mr. Griego worked as a floater only during his first stint of employment. Id. at 68:2–6, 99:13–15. 15 See id. at 131:23–132:18. 16 See id. at 43:18–44:1, 132:15–25, 184:1–194:9 (indicating that Mr. Griego had several negative interactions with Charles Brown, Phillip Bell, and Phillip Prine, among others, during his first stint of employment). But see id. at 141:20–23, 185:23–186:4 (suggesting that Phillip Bell was not particularly harassing or otherwise rude to Mr. Griego during Mr. Griego’s first stint of employment). 17 See id. at 64:8–24. Mr. Griego would frequently miss, or arrive late to, scheduled shifts. Mr. Griego says that his absences were largely related to attending medical appointments. Mr. Griego’s medical conditions are both physical and mental. Physically, Mr. Griego has leg problems. A childhood surgery left a scar on Mr. Griego’s leg that can tear open and bleed.18 This issue used to occur with such frequency that Mr. Griego had to be discharged from the United States Army.19

Additionally, Mr. Griego’s leg causes him constant pain, makes him walk with a limp, and requires him to wear a leg brace.20 Mentally, Mr. Griego suffers from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Mr. Griego’s PTSD is primarily the result of witnessing a serious car accident shortly after he began working for Lennox.21 Lennox’s written attendance policy operated on a point system.22 Each point was recorded as an “occurrence.”23 An employee who arrived late or left early, but still worked more than four hours of his or her shift, would receive 0.5 occurrences.24 If an employee missed a full day or showed up but worked less than four hours of his or her shift, then that employee would receive

18 Id. at 15:20–16:12. 19 Id. at 16:18–17:11. 20 Id. 80:9–11, 107:11–108:2. 21 Id. at 34:18–35:16. 22 Id. at 68:18–25. During Mr.

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Griego v. Lennox Industries Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griego-v-lennox-industries-inc-ared-2023.