Johnnie Brooks, Jr. v. Davey Tree Expert Company

478 F. App'x 934
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 17, 2012
Docket11-5102
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 478 F. App'x 934 (Johnnie Brooks, Jr. v. Davey Tree Expert Company) 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
Johnnie Brooks, Jr. v. Davey Tree Expert Company, 478 F. App'x 934 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

COX, District Judge.

Plaintiff-Appellant Johnnie Brooks, Jr. appeals from the order and judgment of the district court granting Defendant-Ap-pellee The Davey Tree Expert Company’s motion for summary judgment in this action under the Age Discrimination Employment Act, 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq. (“the ADEA”). As explained below, because Brooks has established a prima facie case of age discrimination and has submitted sufficient evidence of pretext, we shall reverse the district court’s summary judgment ruling and remand the case for trial.

BACKGROUND 1

Brooks began working for Morehead Tree Surgery in approximately 1980. While employed there, Brooks worked his way up to foreman, after first having worked as both a bucket operator and a climber.

In January of 1995, Davey Tree acquired the assets of Morehead Tree Surgery and Brooks became a Davey Tree employee. Brooks continued to hold a foreman position when he began working for Davey Tree. At that time, Brooks was 41 years old. Brooks was assigned to *936 Davey Tree’s Clarksville, Tennessee utility contract. Under that contract, Davey Tree engaged in the practice of line clearings for public utilities, including the clearing of tree growth from power lines, clearance of rights-of-way, and chemical brush control.

On February 2, 1995, Brooks’s supervisor signed various “Certificates of Training and Demonstrated Proficiency” for Brooks as a foreman, indicating that Brooks had received training in various areas and was proficient in performing various job duties.

A foreman’s job duties include conducting safety meetings or “job briefings,” as well as writing time reports and other required paperwork.

In August of 2007, James Barker became Brooks’s supervisor. Matthew Little served as Davey Tree’s Area Manager and, at all relevant times, was Barker’s supervisor.

Barker made age-biased comments to Brooks at work and a few of those instances stuck out in Brooks’s mind because they “really made [him] mad.” (Brooks Dep. at 116).

The first time Barker made such a comment to Brooks was early in Barker’s employment with Davey Tree, during the second or third time that Barker went to see Brooks on the job. (Id. at 91-92). Brooks was working with a saw when Barker came up behind him, punched him in the ribs, and said, “you’re too old to be doing that kind of stuff anymore.” Barker was not smiling when this occurred. After Brooks responded that he could do his work “just like anybody else,” Barker asked Brooks if he had his paperwork ready and said nothing else. (Id.).

Another incident occurred in September of 2007, while Brooks and his crew were at a safety meeting. Within earshot of Brooks and his crew, Barker said that Brooks was “too old to do his work anymore.” (Brooks Dep. at 93-94).

On another occasion, Barker called Brooks “an old fart” and said to Brooks, “I still think you’re too old.” (Id. at 95-96 & 113).

Brooks testified that he did not report Barker’s comments to Little because Barker and Little were “buddy-buddies,” and he did not want to lose his job. (Id. at 97-98).

Davey Tree employee James Brice 2 testified that, on several occasions, Barker said that if Brooks “was too old to get out and do his job — or get out and do simple minimal tasks, that he didn’t need to be working at Davey at all.” (Brice Dep. at 32).

On January 22, 2007, Davey Tree issued a “Safety Gram,” stating that at least one job briefing shall be conducted before the start of the first job of each day. In November of 2007, Davey Tree began requiring foremen to write down what they discussed during job briefings and have each crew member sign off that the job briefing was held.

Brooks was terminated following an accident that occurred on February 21, 2008. Prior to that accident, in the approximately thirteen years that Brooks worked for Davey Tree, he had received two safety violation notices.

The first safety violation notice was on June 25, 1998, when Brooks received a “Safe Practice Violation Notice,” from a supervisor named Jeff Wiley. That Notice *937 described the violation as “Tree should have been pieced down instead of 1 large trunk, Foreman has been instructed to get with utility company to drop wires in the future.” (6/25/98 Violation Notice).

The second violation notice was issued by Barker on December 6, 2007. That notice marked the line “Violation Not Listed Above, Explain Below,” and then stated: “Foreman has been told all safety rules & proper procedures listed above. He (John Brooks) allowed crew member to break minimum approach distance. He also allowed crew member to operate the bucket w/out safety belt.” (12/6/07 Violation Notice). 3

A typical Davey Tree tree-trimming crew consists of three employees: 1) a foreman, 2) a climber, and 3) a grounds person.

There were two crews working in the Clarksville area on February 21, 2008: 1) Brooks’s crew; and 2) a crew managed by foreman William Parks. Brooks was the foreman for his crew, Richard Price was the climber, and James Brice was the grounds person. The other crew consisted of foreman William Parks, climber Phil Wagenbaugh, Sr., and grounds person Phil Wagenbaugh, Jr.

On February 20, 2008, the day prior to starting work at the site, Brooks and his crew drove there to see what they were going to have to do at that site. That job was to “clear cut” (i.e., cut everything down to the ground) an area for a power line. At approximately 3:00 p.m. that day, Brooks and his crew, and Parks and his crew, walked the site but no cutting took place.

The next day, February 21, 2008, Brooks and his crew got to the site at about 7:00 a.m. It was drizzling rain. Brooks testified that he held a job briefing with his crew at approximately 7:00 a.m. Parks held his own job briefing with his crew.

While the crews were getting their chainsaws ready, Brooks and Parks walked down to the site and discussed that the job would not take very long. Brooks told Parks that Eddie Combs, the “lighting boss,” was coming to the site. Brooks walked back to his truck to wait for Combs and told his crew to go down to the site with Parks.

Combs arrived shortly thereafter. Combs left after 10 or 15 minutes and Brooks went back to his truck to finish some Davey Tree paperwork. Brooks testified that he had just finished his paperwork, and stepped out of his truck, when his cellular phone rang. It was a crew member calling to tell him that Parks, the foreman of the other crew, had been hit by a tree.

Brooks called Barker and advised of the accident. Barker came to the site at ap *938 proximately 10:00 a.ra. on February 21, 2008, and asked Brooks what happened. Brooks told Barker that Parks was cutting a tree and got hit by it.

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478 F. App'x 934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnnie-brooks-jr-v-davey-tree-expert-company-ca6-2012.