Hand v. CSX Transportation, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedMarch 15, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-00941
StatusUnknown

This text of Hand v. CSX Transportation, Inc. (Hand v. CSX Transportation, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hand v. CSX Transportation, Inc., (S.D. Ohio 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

RaeShaun Hand, : : Case No. 1:19-cv-941 Plaintiff, : : Judge Susan J. Dlott v. : : Order Granting Amended Motion for CSX Transportation, Inc., : Partial Summary Judgment : Defendant. :

This matter is before the Court on Defendant’s Amended Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Doc. 29), to which Plaintiff filed a Response in Opposition (Doc. 31) and Defendant filed a Reply (Doc. 33). Defendant CSX Transportation, Inc. (“CSXT”) seeks partial summary judgment on the whistleblower retaliation claim brought by Plaintiff RaeShaun Hand under the Federal Railroad Safety Act (“FRSA”), 49 U.S.C. § 20109. For the reasons that follow, the Court will GRANT the Amended Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. I. BACKGROUND A. Factual History1 CSXT is a railroad carrier engaged in interstate commerce within the meaning of the FRSA. CSXT hired Hand in 2003. He worked as a sheet metal worker in CSXT’s Louisville Division at all relevant times. CSXT provided Hand with on-the-job training and required him to follow written safety rules. (Hand Dep., Doc. 24 at PageID 238.) In 2017, CSXT suspended Hand for fifteen days for allegedly breaking two of those safety rules after he reported that he

1 The factual history is derived from CSXT’s Proposed Undisputed Facts (Doc. 29-1) and Hand’s Response (Doc. 31-1), except where specifically noted otherwise. had been injured during a workplace accident. Hand denies that he broke safety rules. He alleges that CSXT violated the FRSA by suspending him in retaliation for reporting his injury. 1. CSXT Safety Rules As explained in more detail below, following his injury, CSXT accused Hand of violating its written Safe Way Rules related to job briefings and suspended loads. James Turner, the

company’s Chief Mechanical Officer, averred that “CSXT consistently holds employees accountable for violating the Company’s important safety rules.” (Doc. 22 at PageID 204.) a. Safe Way Rule 2002—Job Briefings CSXT Safe Way Rule 2002 addressed job briefings: 2002.1 Effective job briefings at the beginning of and throughout our workday make us more aware of our surroundings and better prepared to recognize and avoid potential hazards. . . . * * * 2002.2 A job briefing must be conducted before beginning a work activity and when: a. Work activity or conditions change, or * * * d. Required to secure any equipment or train . . . . * * * 2002.3 To conduct a job briefing, employees must: 1. Discuss the sequence of job steps; 2. Identify, eliminate, contain, or communicate all potential hazards related to the task(s); * * * 6. Ensure understanding of the planned sequence of events; and 7. Follow up to ensure compliance with safe work practices. (Doc. 22-1 at PageID 205–206.) b. Safe Way Rule 2405—Suspended Loads Safe Way Rule 2405 addressed the use of hoisting equipment and suspended loads. Rule 2405.2(c) stated that employees performing work with cranes and hoisting equipment must not “place [themselves] between a suspended load and an obstruction.” (Id. at PageID 207.)

2. July 11, 2017 Incident On July 11, 2017, Hand was injured on the job. Hand was working at CSXT’s Queensgate Locomotive Shop in Cincinnati, Ohio. He and his co-worker, Steven Roberts, were assigned to remove a snowplow from the front of a locomotive engine. Hand had removed snowplows from engines before, sometimes with Roberts. (Doc. 32 at PageID 643.) The snowplow was 12-feet long, 3-and-a-half-feet tall, and weighed 872 pounds. Hand and Roberts conducted at least a limited job briefing before beginning work, but the scope of the briefing required and the briefing conducted are disputed. Hand and Roberts discussed that Roberts would use a torch to burn off the bolts attaching the snowplow to the engine, while Hand would

act as the “safety person” to make sure no one approached them. According to Hand, they also discussed that after removing the plow Roberts would get the forklift to move the plow while Hand would get the four wooden blocks onto which Roberts would place the plow. (Doc. 24 at PageID 257–258; Doc. 32 at PageID 643.)2

2 Hand knew that CSXT required him to conduct a job briefing before performing a task on the railroad. He offered the following testimony at his deposition about when job briefings had to be performed:

Q. So every time a new person would enter your job you would conduct a new job briefing? A. Yes. Q. Okay. Would you do job briefings for various steps of your job for the day? A. For each job assigned. Q. What does that mean? A. If I was assigned one job and was told to do another job with somebody else, I would job brief with that next person. Q. Okay. I assume some jobs have multiple steps involved, correct? A. Yes. Hand admitted that he and Roberts did not discuss securing the plow to the forklift when moving it. (Doc. 31-1 at 628.) Hand had never secured the plow to a forklift during previous jobs. (Doc. 24 at PageID 318.) Hand and Roberts removed the snowplow from the locomotive engine where the engine was standing. After Roberts torched off the bolts, the plow fell four inches to the ground. (Doc.

24 at PageID 254.) The next step was to move the snowplow to the side out of the way of the locomotive. Roberts went to get a forklift. (Id. at PageID 255.) Hand did not think that Roberts was qualified to operate the forklift, but he had seen Roberts do so multiple times in the past in front of the foreman. (Id. at PageID 256–257.) When Roberts came back with the forklift, he opened up the cab door to confirm that Hand had placed the blocks for the plow. (Id. at PageID 259.) Hand continued to act as the safety person and gave Roberts directions to position the plow onto the blocks. (Id. at PageID 264.) Roberts moved the plow in a vertical, upright position. Hand stated that after Roberts placed the plow on the blocks, still in an upright position, Roberts began to pull the forklift away from the plow without waiting for Hand’s

command. (Id. at PageID 267.) Hand contends that Roberts was supposed to wait for his command because he was doing a visual safety check. (Id.) Hand testified at his deposition that they otherwise had done a verbal job briefing before each step of the process. (Id. at PageID

Q. Would you job brief before each step? A. Yes.

(Doc. 24 at PageID 249–250 (emphasis added)). He later testified a second time that he was required to have a separate, verbal job briefing for each step of a job. (Id. at PageID 310.)

Other employees were also asked how often job briefings had to be performed. Senior Mechanical Manager Jerry Hughes testified that “[j]ob briefings can take place multiple times during a task.” (Doc. 27 at PageID 438.) He went on to say that multiple job briefings would be needed if conditions changed, an issue arose, or someone new joined the task. (Id. at PageID 439.) Jerry “Bubba” Turner, the Terminal Superintendent, also testified that job briefings were to be held at the beginning of a job and when “outside factors” or “the work scope” changed. (Doc. 25 at PageID 358.) George Code, a Lead Machinist, stated that job re-briefings were required “any time the work changes, in any way, shape, or form.” (Doc. 26 at PageID 405.) 311.) The snowplow tipped over towards the locomotive when Roberts began to reverse the forklift. (Ud. at PageID 271.) Hand pushed on the plow handle to move himself away from the plow as it fell, and he injured his back and shoulder in doing so. (/d. at PageID 270-272.) Hand reported that he was injured to his supervisor, Mechanical Manager Josh Webb, who in turn notified Terminal Superintendent Jerry “Bubba” Turner. (Doc. 32 at PageID 644.) Approximately twenty minutes later, Webb took Hand to the hospital.

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Hand v. CSX Transportation, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hand-v-csx-transportation-inc-ohsd-2021.