Hall v. ITT AUTOMOTIVE

362 F. Supp. 2d 952, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4359, 2005 WL 675661
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedMarch 22, 2005
Docket3:04 CV 7142
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 362 F. Supp. 2d 952 (Hall v. ITT AUTOMOTIVE) 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
Hall v. ITT AUTOMOTIVE, 362 F. Supp. 2d 952, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4359, 2005 WL 675661 (N.D. Ohio 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KATZ, Senior District Judge.

This matter is before the Court on Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. No. 17). Plaintiff has filed a response (Doc. No. 24); Defendant has filed a reply (Doc. No. 30). The Court has jurisdiction to decide this matter under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. For the following reasons, Defendant’s motion is denied.

Background

Defendant ITT Industries, Inc. (“ITT”) hired Plaintiff Justin Hall (“Hall”) to work as a millwright on September 10, 2003. Hall had previously worked at ITT from September 2002 through January 2003, when he quit because he heard layoffs were imminent. ITT requires all new employees to serve a sixty-day probationary period before they become members of the International Aerospace and Machinists Union (“the union”). Though Hall had completed the probationary period and become a union member during his first period of employment with ITT, when ITT rehired Hall it required him, like all new hires, to complete another sixty-day probationary period before rejoining the union. All of the events relevant to Hall’s claims took place during his second probationary period, when he was not covered by the union’s collective bargaining agreement.

On October 10, 2003, Hall began to feel sick while working at ITT. He claims he felt faint and nauseous and told his supervisor, Andrew Sobota, (“Sobota”) that he would like to go home. Sobota wrote a note to the ITT Human Resources department stating that Hall had requested to leave work due to illness. Hall left work, but did not see a doctor or provide ITT with a doctor’s excuse for his absence, which he conceded in his deposition was “unexcused.”

On Monday, October 13, 2003, Hall injured his left index finger at work and was taken to the emergency room. He initiated a workers’ compensation claim the same day. Hall underwent follow-up treatment during the next few days; his doctors instructed him to wear a splint that would keep his left hand in the air and to work only with his right hand.

Hall returned to work on Friday, October 17, 2003. After working for about four-and-a-half hours, he reported to his supervisor that he felt faint and that his finger hurt. Hall’s supervisor that day, Steven Franz, wrote a note to Human Resources stating that Hall had requested to leave work early, and Hall went home. He submitted a doctor’s excuse for leaving early on October 17th, and ITT deemed the absence “excused.”

*955 Hall claims that while supervisor Sobota had always been pleasant to him in the past, after Hall hurt his finger and filed a claim for workers’ compensation benefits, Sobota became rude and unpleasant to him and required him to work with his injured hand, in violation of his medical restrictions. Hall claims he reminded Sobota about his medical restrictions, but Sobota still would not follow them.

Hall re-injured his left index finger at work on Thursday, October 30, 2003, when he lost his balance trying to remove a stuck tube from a machine and bumped his finger. He informed Sobota, who wrote a note to Human Resources indicating that Hall had requested to leave to have his finger evaluated. Hall left work to seek treatment.

In late October of 2003, ITT received the first of the bills for Hall’s October 17th workplace injury. It is undisputed that ITT paid the bills.

ITT claims that on November 5, 2003, Sobota verbally reprimanded Hall for quitting work ten minutes early. Sobota claims he observed Hall with his coat on and his machine off at 10:50 p.m., in violation of ITT’s work rule 2(f), “violation of rest period signals and wash up signals,” and that he verbally warned Hall and a union employee with whom Hall was working that day, Louise Mocherman, not to quit before 11:00 p.m. Hall flatly denies these claims, testifying in his deposition that he did not quit work early on November 5, 2003 and did not receive a warning from Sobota. Sobota also claims that on November 6, 2003, he observed Hall away from his machine for at least fifteen minutes, talking with another employee, again in violation of work rule 2(f). Hall denies this as well, claiming he said “Hi” and “See you later” to another employee briefly on his way to and from the restroom. Sobota did not document the November 5 or the November 6 incident in writing until December 11, 2003, when ITT Human Resources asked him for an e-mail describing the occurrences.

On November 7, 2003, Hall was scheduled to work second shift, beginning at 3:00 p.m. Earlier that day, someone from ITT called Hall to tell him that his mother, who also worked at ITT, had taken ill at work and was being taken to the hospital by ambulance, and to ask him to bring his mother’s medication to the plant. Hall took the medication to the plant and followed the ambulance to the hospital. Before his shift at ITT was to begin, Hall called ITT and told them he would not be at work that day, due to his mother’s illness. Later that day, Justine Davenport (“Davenport”), ITT’s Human Resources manager, called Hall and terminated his employment with ITT, citing his attendance and work-rule violations during the probationary period. The parties disagree on where Hall was when he received Davenport’s call on his cellular phone: Hall claims he was at the hospital; Davenport claims that after she first inquired about Hall’s mother’s health, Hall informed her that he was at home.

There is also some confusion about who made the decision to fire Hall and when that decision was made. Sobota claims Davenport called him on the morning of November 6, 2003 — before he allegedly observed Hall take an excessively long break — to inform him that Hall’s probationary period was almost up and to ask about his work habits. Sobota claims he told Davenport that he had witnessed Hall quitting work early the previous night, that Hall’s work was less efficient and more laid back than it had been during his first stint with ITT, and that he was more selective about taking overtime. Sobota testified in his deposition that Davenport told him during that conversation that ITT was going to fire Hall the next day. In *956 the December 11, 2003 e-mail Sobota wrote to Davenport, he reported a slightly different version of the November 6, 2003 phone call, in which he and Davenport mutually agreed during the call to terminate Hall’s employment the next day. Davenport claims she met with David Day, the plant manager, and Brian Brown, the operations manager, after Hall called off on November 7, 2003, and that the three of them collectively agreed at that time to terminate Hall. In yet a fourth scenario, Brown claims that he, Davenport, and So-bota were the ITT employees involved in the decision to terminate Hall.

In any event, Davenport, the common denominator in each scenario, testified that ITT fired Hall because of the two work rule infractions on November 5 and 6, 2003, and, as stated on his written Notice of Termination, “excessive absenteeism.” Davenport testified that' the absenteeism referred to was the absence on November 7, 2003, the day Hall was fired, and the two “early outs” on October 10, 2003, the day Hall became ill at work, and October 17, 2003, the day he left early because his injured finger hurt.

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Bluebook (online)
362 F. Supp. 2d 952, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4359, 2005 WL 675661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-itt-automotive-ohnd-2005.