Johnson v. Mental Health Institute

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 10, 2018
Docket16-1447
StatusPublished

This text of Johnson v. Mental Health Institute (Johnson v. Mental Health Institute) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Mental Health Institute, (iowactapp 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 16-1447 Filed January 10, 2018

ANTOINETTE MARIE JOHNSON, Plaintiff-Appellant,

vs.

MENTAL HEALTH INSTITUTE, STATE OF IOWA, GEORGEANNE CASSIDY-WESCOTT, MARK LYMAN, IOWA DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES Defendants-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Buchanan County, Michael J.

Shubatt, Judge.

The employee appeals from the district court’s grant of summary judgment

for the employer, dismissing the employee’s claims for racial discrimination and

retaliation. AFFIRMED.

Bruce H. Stoltze Jr. of Stoltze & Stoltze, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and John B. McCormally and Barbara

E.B. Galloway, Assistant Attorneys General, for appellees.

Heard by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Potterfield and McDonald, JJ. 2

POTTERFIELD, Judge.

Antoinette Johnson filed a cause of action against her former employer, the

Mental Health Institute,1 claiming racial discrimination and retaliatory discharge.2

MHI filed a motion for summary judgment and, following a hearing, the district court

granted it—dismissing both of Johnson’s claims.

On appeal, Johnson maintains the district court erred in its determination

that she could not establish a prima facie case for discrimination because she

could not prove she was performing her work satisfactorily at the time she was

fired. Regarding her claim for retaliation, Johnson maintains the district court erred

when it ruled she could not prove a causal connection between her complaints

about being discriminated against and harassed and MHI’s decision to fire her. In

the alternative, the district court found that even if Johnson could prove both of her

1 The Mental Health Institute (MHI) is a mental-health facility operated by the State of Iowa and the Iowa Department of Human Services (DHS). Johnson’s claim against MHI also listed the State and DHS, as well as two other employees of MHI who supervised Johnson. We refer to the group of defendants as MHI throughout. 2 Both parties agree that Johnson’s original claim also alleged a hostile work environment. In the employer’s appellate brief, they urge us to find the hostile work environment claim is time barred by Iowa Code section 216.5(13) (2015), even though “[t]he District Court did not rule on the issue.” In her reply brief, Johnson responds with an argument that the statute of limitations does not apply. But in the district court’s ruling, the court stated, “At the outset of the hearing on the motion for summary judgment, Johnson’s counsel agreed that the hostile work environment claim is untimely and should be dismissed. The remaining issue is whether Defendants are entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the claims of racial discrimination and retaliation.” Additionally, in Johnson’s filed “brief in support of resistance to motion for summary judgment, she “agree[s], that her Hostile Work Environment claim is barred by the statute of limitations.” We note that we have no record of the hearing, as it was unreported. In spite of the parties’ apparent confusion about the status of the hostile-work-environment claim, we take as final the district court’s word on the issue that Johnson conceded it was untimely at the hearing on the motion. In doing so, we note that neither party filed a posttrial motion challenging the court’s statement. Thus, we only consider Johnson’s arguments as they apply to her claims for racial discrimination and retaliatory discharge. 3

prima facie cases, her claims still failed because she was unable to establish that

MHI’s stated non-discriminatory and non-retaliatory reasons for firing her were

merely pretext; Johnson maintains this was in error.3

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Johnson began working at MHI in August 2007 as a residential treatment

worker. She was responsible for the direct care of individual patients and worked

under the supervision of a registered nurse. Part of the official description of

Johnson’s position includes “attendance at work and timeliness at work.”

Additionally, the “performance criteria” include: “[is] routinely at work on time” and

“[i]s routinely at work as scheduled.”

In January 2011, Georgeanne Cassidy-Wescott—a named defendant—

became the Director of Nursing for MHI, putting her in charge of the nursing

department. This placed Johnson in Cassidy-Wescott’s chain of command.

In 2011, Cassidy-Wescott developed a progressive discipline schedule for

unauthorized absences and tardiness, including disciplinary actions of written

reprimands, suspension without pay, and termination. Under the policy, neither a

3 This appeal included one 1072-page appendix, which contained 830 pages identified simply as “Defendant’s Appendix Supporting Motion for Summary Judgment.” See Iowa R. App P. 6.905(4)(a) (“The appendix shall include a table of contents identifying each part of the record included and disclosing the page number at which each part begins in the appendix.”); see also Iowa R. App. P. 6.905(4)(c) (“If exhibits are included in the appendix, the table of contents shall identify each exhibit by the number or letter with which it was marked in the district court, give a concise description of the exhibit (e.g., “warranty deed dated ...”; “photograph of construction site”; “Last Will and Testament executed on ...”), and state the page number at which the exhibit appears in the appendix.”). Although these violations may seem inconsequential, compliance with the rules facilitates efficient navigation through an appendix, thus fostering our ability to achieve maximum productivity in deciding a high volume of cases. See Iowa R. Civ. P. 21.11. 4

supervisor’s coaching and counseling session nor a written work directive given to

the employee is considered a disciplinary action.

In March 2012, Mark Lyman, a registered nurse and another named

defendant, became Johnson’s supervisor.

In April, Lyman had a coaching and counseling session with Johnson to

discuss her job performance because she had six incidents of unscheduled

absences within the previous twelve months.

Johnson received two coaching and counseling sessions in May—one

because she arrived twenty-five minutes late and another because she failed to

inform her supervisor she had been arrested within twenty-four hours of the arrest,

as work rules required.

Lyman had two more coaching and counseling sessions with Johnson in

July due to an unexcused absence and her failure to follow the call-in procedure

when she was absent.

In August, Lyman had a coaching and counseling session with Johnson

after she was tardy to work. Lyman gave Johnson a written reprimand for a

separate incident of tardiness when she arrived at work two hours late. Johnson

received a second written reprimand in August when she had an unscheduled

absence—her eighth in twelve months.

Johnson was given a one-day suspension without pay to be served on

September 11 as a result of her five tardies between April and September.

In December, Lyman had a coaching and counseling session with Johnson

after another unscheduled absence. 5

In January 2013, Johnson received a written reprimand for failing to follow

the call-in procedure when she was absent and for having another no-call, no-

show for work—her second since June 2012.

Johnson also received a written reprimand on February 14 for being fifty

minutes tardy to work on February 2.4

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