Groves v. South Bend Community School Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedNovember 19, 2021
Docket3:18-cv-00979
StatusUnknown

This text of Groves v. South Bend Community School Corporation (Groves v. South Bend Community School Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Groves v. South Bend Community School Corporation, (N.D. Ind. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA SOUTH BEND DIVISION

WILLIAM GROVES,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 3:18-CV-979 JD

SOUTH BEND COMMUNITY SCHOOL CORPORATION,

Defendant.

OPINION AND ORDER Plaintiff William Groves, a white male, filed this case alleging reverse race discrimination and retaliation after he lost out on two South Bend Community School Corporation administrative jobs to a black candidate. Defendant Board of School Trustees of the South Bend Community School Corporation (“SBCSC”) has moved the Court for summary judgment on Mr. Groves’s claims. Mr. Groves opposes SBCSC’s motion and has requested the Court hold an oral argument on the motion before issuing a ruling. For the following reasons, the Court finds oral argument is unnecessary and grants SBCSC’s motion for summary judgment.

I. Factual Background William Groves is a white male who began working with the South Bend Community School Corporation in the 1991-1992 school year. He taught social studies at Clay High School, one of the high schools within the SBCSC umbrella, and served as head coach of the freshman football and freshman girls’ basketball teams in that first year. (Ex. 8, Groves Dep. 24:11–14; DE 25-7 at 2.) He subsequently took on more advanced academic, administrative, and athletic positions over time, becoming dean of students at Clay in 2001 (Groves Dep. at 35:11–15, 36:3– 8), student management director at Clay in 2004, and then athletic director at Adams High School, another high school under the SBCSC umbrella, in 2007. (DE 25-7 at 2.) Mr. Groves was still serving as athletic director at Adams when the events that gave rise to this lawsuit began in 2017.

SBCSC was going to be losing its Corporation Director of Athletics (“CDA”) at the end of the 2016-2017 school year and had started looking to hire a replacement. (Ex. 6, Seitz Dep. at 18:17–25; Ex. 8, Groves Dep. at 30:22–23.) The CDA was a Corporation-wide position charged with maintaining fiscal responsibility throughout the Corporation athletic programs, working to increase athletic participation, monitoring athletic policies and procedures, leading fundraising and marketing efforts, and working with the Indiana High School Athletic Association (“IHSAA”). (DE 30-5.) The 2017 job posting for the position listed only a bachelor’s degree and a valid driver’s license as required qualifications. (Id.) Mr. Groves applied for the CDA job opening and was one of four candidates Kenneth Spells, the SBCSC superintendent in 2017, eventually interviewed. Dr. Spells is a black male and

was the sole person responsible for interviewing and recommending candidates to the school board for the CDA position. (Ex. 25-2, Spells Dep. at 25:19–21.) Another candidate Dr. Spells interviewed was Seabe Gavin, a black male who had been an employee with SBCSC since 2002 and had worked as a substitute teacher, student manager, administrative assistant, in-school suspension coordinator, teacher, and coach during his time with the SBCSC. (Ex. 5, Gavin Dep. at 19, 21–25, 37.) Mr. Gavin had a criminal history at the time he applied for the CDA position, having received two felony convictions in 1999. (DE 30-22; DE 30-23.) He had also previously been terminated both from an earlier job he had before coming to SBCSC and from a student manager position he previously held at SBCSC. (DE 30-3; DE 30-4.) SBCSC ran two background checks on Mr. Gavin in 2002 and 2007, but neither one showed he had a criminal history. (DE 30-33.) SBCSC did not run any background checks on Mr. Gavin after 2007 despite having a written policy that background checks were to be run on candidates before hiring them for administrative

positions. (DE 30-31.) Dr. Spells stated the lack of subsequent background checks on Mr. Gavin aligned with SBCSC’s practice of not performing background checks on current SBCSC employees who were accepting new positions within the Corporation. (Ex. 10, Spells Dep. at 9:5–12.) Mr. Groves never reported any of his problematic criminal or employment history on his job applications and there is no evidence that anyone involved in any hiring process at issue in this case ever learned about Mr. Gavin’s background. (Ex. 4, Spells Dep. at 17:11–23, 19:17– 24; Ex. 5, Henderson Dep. at 17:17–21; DE 30-27.) Dr. Spells interviewed Mr. Groves, Mr. Gavin, and two other candidates for the CDA position. He used the same set of questions in each interview. (Ex. 4, Spells Dep. at 54:11–22.) Dr. Spells eventually recommended that Mr. Gavin be chosen as the new CDA and Mr. Gavin

received the CDA job based on that recommendation. (Ex. 4, Spells Dep. at 15:14–17, 28:17–20, 29:7–10.) Dr. Spells stated he chose Mr. Gavin over the other candidates because Mr. Gavin interviewed well, gave Dr. Spells the impression he could help ensure SBCSC had a good relationship with the IHSAA after a stretch of time where the relationship had been strained, gave good answers about helping students get into college, and was active and visible in the community. (Ex. 4, Spells Dep. at 29:9–30:2; 30:16–21, 31:13–32:3, 36:21–37:8.) Dr. Spells stated he did not choose Mr. Groves in part because Mr. Groves interviewed poorly. Mr. Groves brought up money, his past firing of coaches as an athletic director, and his desire to have total control over SBCSC athletics if given the CDA job, none of which sat well with Dr. Spells. (Ex. 4, Spells Dep. at 42:15–25, 46:15–47:10, 48:9–18; Ex. 8, Groves Dep. at 97:14–21.) Dr. Spells also cited Mr. Groves’s past issues with IHSAA compliance and sloppy paperwork during his time as an athletic director as reasons he did not recommend Mr. Groves. (Ex. 4, Spells Dep. at 38:17–23, 42:15–25, 45:21–25, 48:9–18.) None of Mr. Groves’s yearly

SBCSC evaluations described IHSAA compliance issues or sloppy paperwork (DE 30-16; DE 30-17; DE 30-18; DE 30-19; DE 30-20; DE 30-21), but Mr. Groves admitted to the issues during his deposition. (Ex. 8, Groves Dep. at 81:15–19, 91:11–92:21.) After finding out he did not receive the CDA job, Mr. Groves filed a Charge of Discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in November 2017 alleging the decision to hire Mr. Gavin was racially motivated. (DE 25-8.) The EEOC issued a dismissal and notice of rights in September 2018 (DE 25-8) and Mr. Groves then filed his original complaint with this Court in December 2018 (DE 1). While this case was pending, Mr. Groves faced more employment issues at SBCSC. In March 2019, SBCSC announced that it was going to restructure by eliminating the CDA and

individual high school athletic director positions in favor of a new, hybrid position of Dean of Students/Athletics at four of the SBCSC high schools. The idea to make the change was formed when Dr. Spells was still superintendent and was implemented when Todd Cummings, a new superintendent, took control. (Ex. 2, Spell Dep. at 5:9–11, 11:20–13:5, 52:7–12; Ex. 3, Cummings Dep. at 14:12–16:8.) SBCSC and Dr. Cummings cited cost saving as the driving force behind the restructuring. (Ex. 3, Cummings Dep. at 14:9–17, 15:24–16:8; DE 30-13.) The restructuring left both Mr. Groves and Mr. Gavin without jobs. SBCSC’s plan was to allow any employees whose positions had been eliminated as part of the restructuring to apply for the new Dean of Students/Athletics positions. (DE 30-13.) SBCSC put together a committee to interview the nine candidates who were selected to interview for the four new Dean of Students/Athletics positions. (Ex. 3, Cummings Dep. at 15:24–16:8; DE 25-4 at 15.) The principals of each of the four high schools who would be hiring someone for the role were on the committee along with a middle school principal. (Ex. 7,

Henderson Dep. at 10:21–11:10; Ex 6, Seitz Dep. at 41:14–19; DE 25-4 at 14.) Both Mr. Groves and Mr. Gavin applied for the four positions and received offers to interview. (Ex. 6, Seitz Dep.

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Groves v. South Bend Community School Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groves-v-south-bend-community-school-corporation-innd-2021.