Jaques v. Herbert

447 F. Supp. 2d 858, 2006 WL 2472982, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59655
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedAugust 24, 2006
Docket3:05 CV 7197
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 447 F. Supp. 2d 858 (Jaques v. Herbert) 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
Jaques v. Herbert, 447 F. Supp. 2d 858, 2006 WL 2472982, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59655 (N.D. Ohio 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KATZ, Senior District Judge.

This matter is before the Court on the motions of all three Defendants, United Auto Workers Local No. 12 (“Local 12” or “the Union”), DaimlerChrysler AG (“Daimler Chrysler” or “the Company”), and Lee Herbert, for summary judgment (Doc. Nos. 68, 70, and 71), and also on Plaintiffs motion for partial summary judgment (Doc. No. 72), motion to strike (Doc. No. 132), and motion to file a sur-reply instanter (Doc. No. 137). All six motions are now decisional.

Background

DaimlerChrysler hired Valerie Jaques in 1985, to work at non-skilled production operator jobs at the Jeep plant on North Cove Boulevard in Toledo, Ohio. Jaques was a “floater” who was assigned to a particular department but who “floated” around to different jobs to fill in for absent employees. She never had a permanent position of her own. Throughout her employment, Jaques was a member of the United Auto Workers Local No. 12. For *861 at least some of her employment, Jaques was “PQX,” meaning she had medical restrictions limiting the work she could do.

In 1997, Jaques filed several grievances about harassment in her workplace. The Union returned the grievances to her, explaining that by filing a “huge number of grievances” she was “abusing the process.” The Union said her grievances were “unclear” and “vague,” and encouraged her to refile one single grievance using a “who, what, when, where, and why” format to describe all the harassment. (Doc. No. 76-26). She did not refile. However, also in 1997, Jaques filed a charge with the Ohio Civil Rights Commission (“OCRC”) claiming that DaimlerChrysler disciplined her because of her sex. The charge was dismissed.

In January 1998, DaimlerChrysler terminated Jaques for being absent for five days without documentation. Jaques then sought help from the “Employee Assistance Program” (“EAP”). The EAP is a program that is bargained for between DaimlerChrysler and Local 12. The EAP provides assistance to union workers and is staffed by “EAP counselors” who are members of the union and who are appointed to their positions by the Chairman of Local 12. However, EAP counselors are paid by DaimlerChrysler, and the Company keeps track of their working hours and approves their leaves. When an employee seeks EAP assistance, the job of the counselors is to assess their problems and to refer them to outside professionals for help. Employees may turn to the EAP program voluntarily, or may be refereed there by union officials to help them with problems at work.

In 1998, Jaques met with EAP counselor Lee Herbert, who recommended that she participate in a drug rehabilitation program in an effort to get her job back. Jaques completed an outpatient drug rehabilitation program.

In December of 1998, Jaques filed a grievance seeking reinstatement on a last-chance basis. In January 1999, Daimler-Chrysler agreed to reinstate her under a last-change agreement that required her to abide by its terms for three years. One of the agreement’s terms was that any violation of Company rules would result in immediate discharge. The agreement also required Jaques to “comply with a treatment program as outlined by the plant E.A.P. Representative until the Company and U.A.W. Local 12 are notified that it is no longer necessary for [her] to be in said program,” and to provide a bi-weekly report of her progress in the program. (Doc. No. 72-27). Failure to comply with the program was grounds for immediate discharge. Though the agreement Jaques signed said she would be placed in another plant, DaimlerChrysler changed the agreement by interlineation and returned Ja-ques to the body shop at the North Cove plant as a floater. (Union committeeman Ken Dudley testified that the reference to the other plant was an error.) (Doc. No. 88, pp. 61-65).

In August 2000, a grand jury indicted Jaques for obtaining, possessing, or using the personal identifying information of another with the intent to fraudulently obtain credit, property, services, debt, or other legal obligation. Jaques had used a credit card opened in the name of Joan Limmer, a co-worker, to buy over $7,000 worth of furniture and other items. Jaques claims that though she signed the charge slips, it was her niece (who is the daughter of another DaimlerChrysler employee, Ray Robasser, Jaques’s brother-in-law) who somehow opened the credit card account. Jaques pled “no contest” to the fourth-degree felony of taking the identity of another, and was found guilty on February 9, 2001. She was sentenced to seven years community control and required to wear an ankle bracelet. She continued to work.

*862 In October 2000, a grand jury indicted Jaques for misuse of a credit card, for using a card opened in the name of Kathy Burnett, another DaimlerChrysler employee. Jaques pled “no contest” and was sentenced to four years community control, served concurrently with her other sentence.

In April of 2001, Jaques’s union steward, Tony Everhardt, told her to report to the EAP program because she was, in her words, “having lots and lots of trouble in the body shop,” which trouble she described as “I could never do nothing right, the bosses were approaching me yelling at me, I couldn’t do my job right, I was paid off [unable to do the work in the body shop], I believe, three times, I believe, out of the body shop.” (Doc. No. 76, p. 83). Jaques admits she was overusing Xanax at the time.

Jaques went to the EAP office and met again with EAP counselor Lee Herbert. At that time, April of 2001, Herbert and Jaques began a sexual relationship. Over the course of their relationship, they had sex several times in his office and at a motel. Jaques estimates they had sex in April or early May 2001, two or three times in June 2001, in early August 2001, about three times in October of 2008, once in November 2003, at least once in January 2004, and on February 20, 2004. During their first encounter, which occurred in Herbert’s office at the plant, Herbert first tried to have sex with Jaques on a chair. When that proved unwieldy, he left and returned with an exercise mat, and they proceeded on the floor. Plaintiff claims that their encounters often began suddenly, while she was in Herbert’s office to discuss her grievance. When asked at her deposition whether at any time she did anything to indicate to Mr. Herbert that his advances were unwelcome, Jaques responded, “I didn’t say yes or I didn’t say no. They just happened.” (Doc. No. 76, p. 268).

During her 2001 referral to EAP, Herbert made the assessment that Jaques was already seeing a therapist and should continue to do so. He testified that he was not aware of her Xanax abuse at the time, and that he did not refer her for any other treatment.

After Jaques was convicted of using credit cards in their names, Joan Limmer and Kathy Burnett complained to Daimler-Chrysler Labor Relations that Jaques was still employed. It was widely believed that Jaques had gotten the social security numbers necessary to open the credit card accounts from a seniority list taken from the plant. (It was common practice at the time for such lists, which often contained social security numbers to be publicly available in the plant.)

Labor Relations supervisor Jean Hathaway investigated.

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447 F. Supp. 2d 858, 2006 WL 2472982, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaques-v-herbert-ohnd-2006.