Harrison Igwe v. Salvation Army

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 23, 2019
Docket19-1082
StatusUnpublished

This text of Harrison Igwe v. Salvation Army (Harrison Igwe v. Salvation Army) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison Igwe v. Salvation Army, (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 19a0539n.06

No. 19-1082

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Oct 23, 2019 HARRISON IGWE, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN SALVATION ARMY, ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ) Defendant-Appellee. ) )

BEFORE: MOORE, McKEAGUE, and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges.

GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Harrison Igwe alleges his former employer, defendant Salvation Army, violated

the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”) and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of

1964 (“Title VII”) when it chose another candidate for a promotion and later terminated his

position. Igwe now appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the

Salvation Army. We affirm.

I.

Harrison Igwe, Ph.D is an African American man of Nigerian origin who was 63 years old

at the time of his discharge. Dr. Igwe began working for the Salvation Army in 1985 and joined

the Southeast Michigan Salvation Army Rehabilitation Center (the “Detroit ARC”) as its Director

of Rehabilitation Services (“DRS”) in 2003, where he was responsible for client intake and

counseling. Then, in 2006, the Salvation Army restructured the Detroit ARC, and Plaintiff’s job No. 19-1082, Igwe v. Salvation Army

title changed from DRS to “Director of Programs”1 because another employee assumed

responsibility for client intake.

Things changed in 2016, when Larry Manzella became the Detroit ARC’s administrator.

Like plaintiff, Manzella has a long history with the Salvation Army. He served as the administrator

for several Salvation Army rehabilitation centers prior to overseeing the Detroit ARC. When

Manzella began supervising the Detroit ARC, he found “multiple problems throughout the

facility.” One such problem was that “the [Detroit ARC] had evolved into silos,” so employees

and departments were not communicating with each other. Manzella also found Dr. Igwe to be

ineffective because he was “[n]ot supervising, decisions were not going through him, [and]

counselors were doing their own thing . . . . Just chaos, disorganization, miscommunication.”

Manzella specifically took issue with Dr. Igwe’s communication skills:

Communication was terrible. I’ll just say it right out. When you ask somebody a question, you’re looking for some type of response, whether it’s positive or negative, something. Conversations with Dr. Igwe were one-sided. They were yes, okay, yes. Trying to get information from him was very difficult. I’ll give you an example. We have a board meeting and we have all the directors sitting around the table and one by one they give their report, extensive reports about what’s going on in their department. When it comes to Dr. Igwe, what’s happening with your program? Silence. It’s good. It’s good. The numbers are coming down, can you explain why? Gets up, runs out of the room, goes and get[s] somebody to come back and answer the question. There is nothing there. No response, conversation after conversation. It’s just the way it was.

Because of the issues he observed, Manzella made structural changes to the Detroit ARC.

One of the major changes he instituted was hiring a DRS who would assume responsibility over

both the programs department (overseen by Dr. Igwe) and the housing department (overseen by

another employee). Manzella made the change to return the Detroit ARC to compliance with

1 This position is also referred to in the record as the Director of Program Services or the Program Director. -2- No. 19-1082, Igwe v. Salvation Army

national Salvation Army policy. He also thought it would help solve the communication

breakdowns he observed. Accordingly, Manzella posted the DRS position online and solicited

applications from internal candidates.

On December 22, 2016, Dr. Igwe met with Manzella to discuss the DRS position. Manzella

wrote to his supervisors that the meeting “went very well[,]” and that he had “invited [Dr. Igwe]

to apply for any position he was comfortable with.” Plaintiff admits that Manzella also informed

him that the Director of Programs position was being terminated as part of the restructuring. After

the meeting, Dr. Igwe applied for the DRS position, but no others.

But by then, Manzella was already focused on his preferred candidate for the DRS position.

In mid-December, he wrote to his superiors to ask whether the Salvation Army’s requirement that

the DRS possess a master’s degree was “absolute.” He explained that he had a candidate named

Lynne Williams “in mind” for the position, but that she did not hold a master’s degree. Manzella’s

superiors responded that he could consider candidates with bachelor’s degrees, but also expressed

concern that he might be “limit[ing]” himself by not “cast[ing] a wider net for potential

candidates.”

Williams is a Caucasian woman. At the time, she was 56 years old and was employed as

the assistant director of spirituality for the women’s campus at the Detroit ARC. She possessed

only a bachelor’s degree but had 15 years of high-level management experience outside of the

Salvation Army. Williams was also a felon because of a struggle with drug addiction in the mid-

2000s. However, she “got clean” in 2010 and viewed her experience with recovery as an asset in

her counseling work.

The hiring process moved relatively quickly. Williams had a preliminary interview with

Manzella and advanced to a second interview with Manzella and his supervisor, Charlene Polsley.

-3- No. 19-1082, Igwe v. Salvation Army

After the second interview, Manzella emailed a summary to his supervisors. He wrote that

Williams’ “[p]ositives” included that she “contribute[d] in [d]iscussions [with] good insight” and

had shown the “necessary leadership skills” in her role at the time. As for concerns, Manzella

noted that Williams lacked a master’s degree and did not seem confident during the interview.

Manzella and Polsley also scheduled an interview with Dr. Igwe (having skipped the

preliminary stage). Before Dr. Igwe’s interview, Manzella documented his thoughts on Dr. Igwe’s

application. On the one hand, Manzella wrote, “it would appear he is far and away the most

qualified candidate for the new position of DRS. He has years of faithful service as our Program

Director along with a strong academic background. He is also a very likeable person who I believe

wants to do well.” But on the other hand, Manzella wrote that Dr. Igwe “lack[ed] one very

important characteristic[:] . . . [L]eadership.” He explained that with Dr. Igwe, “[t]hings tend to

happen around him rather than moving thru [sic] him. If there is a conflict with one of his staff he

generally disappears rather than stepping in to take charge. When confronted at a meeting with a

question he ran out the door to find someone else that could answer my question. His broken

speech has also made it difficult to communicate with him at times.” All in all, Manzella

concluded that “[i]n a different position, Dr. [Igwe] . . . would do very well[,]” but he had “serious

concerns about his assuming the role of DRS . . . .”

Dr. Igwe then interviewed with Manzella and Polsley. According to Polsley, Dr. Igwe did

not interview well because he could not explain how he would handle conflicts among employees

and did not provide substantive answers to questions about the Salvation Army’s residential

program. Dr. Igwe claims that Polsley asked whether he was a U.S.

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