Ivey v. Turbo Group Operations, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedMay 17, 2022
Docket2:21-cv-00008
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Ivey v. Turbo Group Operations, Inc., (S.D. Miss. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI EASTERN DIVISION

JULIA IVEY PLAINTIFF

v. Civil No. 2:21-cv-08-HSO-RHWR

TURBO GROUP OPERATIONS, INC. DEFENDANT

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART DEFENDANT TURBO GROUP OPERATIONS, INC.’S MOTION [28] FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

BEFORE THE COURT is the Motion [28] for Summary Judgment filed by Defendant Turbo Group Operations, Inc. This Motion is fully briefed. Having considered Defendant’s Motion [28] on its merits, the related pleadings, the record, and relevant legal authority, the Court is of the opinion that the Motion [28] for Summary Judgment should be granted in part and denied in part. Defendant will be granted a partial summary judgment as to Plaintiff Julia Ivey’s hostile work environment claim, which will be dismissed. Plaintiff’s remaining claim for retaliation will proceed. I. BACKGROUND A. Factual background Plaintiff Julia Ivey (“Plaintiff” or “Ivey”) began working for Defendant Turbo Group Operations, Inc. (“Defendant” or “Turbo”) on February 15, 2017. Ex. [28-3]. Turbo owns and operates convenience stores, and Plaintiff was employed as a cashier at Turbo’s Pine Belt Discount Beer and Tobacco at the time of the events at issue in this case. Ex. [28-2]. While Ivey was working on August 2, 2017, Shawn Gray (“Gray”), an employee of Southern Beverage Company, Inc., arrived to restock

the store’s beer cooler. Ex. [28-5] at 39-40. Gray allegedly approached Ivey as she was taking inventory of the store’s cigarettes and noticed that her cellular phone was unlocked and opened to the Buffalo Wild Wings website. Id. Gray asked if he could look at the website, and Ivey permitted him to look at her phone. Id. at 41. Ivey asserts that while she continued to count cigarettes, she heard Gray’s phone alert as though it had received several messages in a row. Id. Gray handed Ivey’s

phone back to her, and when Ivey swiped down on its notification screen to see if anyone had sent her a message, id., she noticed that her phone had just shared a topless photograph of herself, id. at 45. Ivey believed that Gray had shared this picture while he was using her phone, because I seen where I shared this photo, and I didn’t share this photo. And that’s how I knew that he did it. Not to mention his phone was going ding, ding, ding, ding, ding on the counter and he had this huge smirk on his face like it was funny.

Id. at 47.

Ivey later determined that the number to which Gray had sent the photograph to was his own phone number. Id. at 48. She told Gray to leave the store and called her supervisor, Nancy Smith (“Smith”), to complain about what had happened. Id. at 48-49. Smith responded that she would come to the store immediately, and Smith arrived about an hour later, along with Eddie Merrill (“Merrill”), a manager for Turbo. Id. Ivey asserts that as she was telling her supervisors what had occurred, they pressured her not to jeopardize the business relationship with Southern Beverage: Eddie basically told me that being that I was a recovering addict, that I knew and understood about mercy, grace, forgiveness and second chances and that I just need to forget about all of this. And that I had a future at Turbo Group, and that if I made a big deal about this, it would probably damper my career and future with them greatly. That’s what Eddie said to me.

Id. at 50.

Smith has testified that she and Merrill met with Ivey to learn the specifics of what occurred, and then contacted Gray’s supervisor at Southern Beverage, Billy Clark (“Clark”). Ex. [28-3] at 1. Clark assured Smith and Merrill “that he would take care of it.” Id. Smith’s impression was that Gray would no longer be servicing the store where Ivey worked. Id. According to Ivey, two days later, on August 4, 2017, Gray returned to the store with two employees of Southern Beverage and brought Ivey a Yeti cooler containing beer. Ex. [28-5] at 63. Ivey considered this gift to be “a bribe” for her silence. Id. She claims that both Smith and Merrill were present, id. at 65, but Smith contends that she was not, Ex. [28-3] at 1. Ivey asserts that Merrill encouraged her to accept the cooler. Ex. [28-5] at 66. Three days after Gray brought Ivey the cooler, Merrill presented Ivey with a notice of disciplinary action for “personal conduct,” specifically for “talking and complaining to another cashier” about another employee’s poor work ethic. Ex. [28- 2] at 45. Ivey signed the bottom of the disciplinary write-up form, acknowledging that she had received it, id., but she asserts that this disciplinary notice involved events that happened several weeks prior to the date indicated on the notice, Ex. [28-5] at 54. One week later, on August 14, 2017, Smith contacted Ivey to inform her of her termination, citing poor performance and violation of company policies.

Ex. [28-3] at 2. According to Ivey, she received notice of her termination via a text message from Smith. Ex. [28-5] at 62. Defendant has presented evidence of four other disciplinary notices, Ex. [28- 2] at 45-51, but Ivey argues these were based upon events that never occurred; further, she maintains that these notices were never presented to her and were fabricated after she was terminated. Resp. [31] at 7. The first notice was dated

August 8, 2017, Ex. [28-2] at 46, and states that the reason for discipline was “violation of company rules” for wearing shorts that “were too short and revealing.” Id. The notice related that Ivey was sent home to change into shorts that complied with the company uniform. Id. Ivey did not sign this disciplinary form, id., and at her deposition she testified that she had never seen the notice before, nor was she ever sent home for a uniform violation, Ex. [28-5] at 76. The second notice, dated August 11, 2017, was for “violation of company

policy” for talking on the telephone while interacting with customers. Id. at 47. Ivey did not sign this disciplinary form, id., and she testified that the only person she spoke with on the phone was her supervisor, Ex. [28-5] at 78. Ivey claims that she never received this notice during the time she was employed by Defendant and that it was fabricated after her termination. Id. The third notice was also dated August 11, 2017, and lists the grounds for discipline as “personal conduct,” “violation of company rules,” and “other just cause.” Ex. [28-2] at 50. The notice states that Ivey “made deflanitary [sic] remarks

to another employee . . . about our company. Comments like these cause a hostile work environment and will not be tolerated.” Id. Ivey did not sign this form, and she has testified that this conversation occurred around August 5, 2017, and was only used against her later as an excuse to fire her after she purportedly jeopardized Defendant’s business relationship with Southern Beverage Company. Ex. [28-5] at 81.

The final notice was dated August 14, 2017, and lists “excessive tardiness or absenteeism” and “violation of company rules” as the reasons for discipline. Ex. [28- 3] at 11. The “action taken” is identified as “termination,” effective August 14, 2017. The notice states that Ivey was late to work on four days, as follows: Monday 8/7/17 34 minutes late Wednesday 8/9/17 9 minutes late 8/11/17 3 minutes late 8/12/17 5 minutes late Id. Ivey did not sign this notice, and stated in her deposition that she was “pretty sure that [she] was late a few times before August, but [Defendant] only wanted to write [her] up after [she] reported [what Gray had done].” Ex. [28-5] at 82. Merrill asserts that Ivey was terminated “for her behavior, job performance, excessive tardiness, personal conduct causing problems between employees and violations of company policy,” Ex.

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Ivey v. Turbo Group Operations, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ivey-v-turbo-group-operations-inc-mssd-2022.