Jorge A. Otero-Acevedo v. Morris-Shea Bridge Company, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedMarch 10, 2026
Docket2:24-cv-00556
StatusUnknown

This text of Jorge A. Otero-Acevedo v. Morris-Shea Bridge Company, Inc. (Jorge A. Otero-Acevedo v. Morris-Shea Bridge Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jorge A. Otero-Acevedo v. Morris-Shea Bridge Company, Inc., (N.D. Ala. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION

JORGE A. OTERO-ACEVEDO, } } Plaintiff, } } v. } Case No.: 2:24-CV-00556-RDP } MORRIS-SHEA BRIDGE COMPANY, } INC., } } Defendant. }

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before the court are Defendant Morris-Shea Bridge Company’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. # 22) and its Motion to Strike (Doc. # 32). The Motion for Summary Judgment has been fully briefed. (Docs. # 24, 28, 31). Plaintiff did not respond to the Motion to Strike. After careful review, and for the reasons discussed below, Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is due to be granted in part and denied in part, and Defendant’s Motion to Strike is due to be denied as moot. I. Background1 Defendant Morris-Shea Bridge Company, Inc. (“MSB”) is a foundation contractor that primarily installs deep foundation systems for commercial and infrastructure projects throughout the United States, the Caribbean, and South America. (Doc. # 23-1 at 34:5-16). MSB has four

1 The facts set out in this opinion are gleaned from the parties’ submissions and the court’s own examination of the evidentiary record. All reasonable doubts about the facts have been resolved in favor of the nonmoving party. See Info. Sys. & Networks Corp. v. City of Atlanta, 281 F.3d 1220, 1224 (11th Cir. 2002). These are the “facts” for summary judgment purposes only. They may not be the actual facts that could be established through live testimony at trial. See Cox v. Adm’r U.S. Steel & Carnegie Pension Fund, 17 F.3d 1386, 1400 (11th Cir. 1994). permanent locations: Irondale, Alabama; Harpersville, Alabama; Angleton, Texas; and Laccasine, Louisiana. (Doc. # 23-2 at 46:7-47:18). MSB’s Equipment Yard is in Harpersville, Alabama, and that is the relevant location related to the facts here. At the yard, MSB repairs machines and augers, fabricates steel cages, manages fleet vehicles, and stores parts, among other things. (Doc. # 23-3 at 46:20-47:2). Chief

Logistical Officer Steve Shea is the highest-ranking employee working at the yard. (Doc. # 23-2 at 44:3-5, 46:1-47:2). Michael McPhillips is the Operations Manager at the yard, and he reports directly to Shea. (Doc. # 23-3 at 10:1-8). Nicole Gwinette worked in the Harpersville office as an in-house clerical person reporting to McPhillips. (Doc. # 23-2 at 174:20-175:6). A. MSB hires Plaintiff Plaintiff Jorge Otero-Acevedo (“Plaintiff”) was born in Puerto Rico and is Hispanic. (Doc. # 1 ¶ 15). On August 1, 2022, Shea hired Plaintiff to be the Trucking/Shipping Manager at the MSB Equipment Yard. (Docs. # 23-2 at 169:2-3; 1 ¶ 16). Luis Rodriguez, MSB’s Operations Manager at the time, referred Plaintiff to MSB. (Docs. # 23-4 at 13:11-21; 23-2 at 168:23-169:3). Plaintiff was qualified to hold the position, and as part of the interview and hiring process, Plaintiff visited the yard and met with Shea, Rodriguez, and other yard employees. (Docs. # 23-4

at 14:14-16:22; 23-3 at 54:12-16). After the visit, Shea hired Plaintiff. (Docs. # 23-2 at 169:2-3; 23-4 at 120). As Trucking/Shipping Manager, Plaintiff oversaw the shipping department, scheduled incoming and outgoing loads of equipment to job sites, and performed inspections on trucks and trailers. (Doc. # 23-4 at 30:4-32:12, pp. 120-24, 130). Plaintiff reported to Dick Shea (President); Richard Shea, Bill Shea, and Steve Shea (Vice Presidents); and Luis Rodriguez (Operations Manager). (Id. at pp. 120-24). When Michael McPhillips was rehired as Operations Manager in 2 November 2022, Plaintiff began reporting to McPhillips. (Docs. # 23-3 at 7:23-8:2, 9:18-19; 23- 4 at 35:9-18). Rodriguez resigned a few weeks after McPhillips was rehired. (Doc. # 23-3 at 12:3-23). Shortly after Plaintiff started working for MSB, another MSB employee, Mike Demarco, send a text message to Shea and Rodriguez stating, “I like the shit out of Jorge. Big time asset!

Good guy. Very knowledgeable. Just met with him and Shane.” (Doc. # 23-4 at p. 139). Rodriguez responded, “He is a fucking Puertorrican [sic] But he is a great guy.” (Id.; 23-2 at 199:9-13). Shea2 claims that he did not respond to the texts and instead called Rodriguez and told him to stop using the phrase “fucking Puerto Rican.” (Docs. # 23-4 at p. 139; 23-2 at 199:1- 202:4). Plaintiff and Shea disagreed at times about how the shipping department should operate. For example, after observing that a driver routinely operated his truck at unsafe speeds well above the speed limit, Plaintiff reduced the vehicle’s maximum speed setting. (Doc. # 23-4 at 184:1-188:5). Shea reacted by yelling at Plaintiff and then reset the truck’s maximum speed

setting to 100 miles per hour. (Id. at 163:11-165:16, 196:7-18). In another instance, Plaintiff wanted to suspend a driver due to repeated accidents, but McPhillips refused to approve the suspension. (Id. at 192:13-195:11). Plaintiff alleges that Shea used the phrase “Puerto Rican way” to describe situations where they should disregard the law and regulations just to get it done. (Doc. # 23-4 at 90:8-11).3

2 Although there are several Sheas working for MSB, the court refers to Steve Shea as “Shea” throughout this opinion. 3 Shea testified that he uses the phrase “Puerto Rican way” as a term of endearment and praise, meaning that employees should work hard, dig in, and find a way to get things done. According to Shea, he uses the phrase to encourage people to work diligently, think through problems, and be resourceful in accomplishing their tasks. (Docs. # 23-2 at 193:20-194:13; 23-3 at 90:7-91:16). 3 According to Plaintiff, Shea used this offensive phrase when Plaintiff expressed concerns that a truck load was “not legal or it’s going to be overweight.” (Id. at 89:21-91:8). Plaintiff also claims that Shea was disrespectful to him, used “bad words,” told him to “shut up,” and got in Plaintiff’s face. (Doc. # 23-4 at 86:2-19). Plaintiff stated that Shea often told “stories about the prostitutes in Puerto Rico and the drugs [there],” which he found offensive. (Id. at 88:22-89:3, 92:16-22).

Shea also made derogatory remarks about MSB’s Venezuelan workers, including statements suggesting that they steal and are lazy, and he characterized Hispanics as a group this way. (Id. at 92:10-93:4). Plaintiff testified that Shea told him to learn to speak “redneck or hillbilly,” and if he was “going to be [at MSB], you need to learn how to speak . . . like us.” (Id. at 87:11-88:14). Even though Plaintiff was a supervisor, Plaintiff claims that McPhillips “made a point of sending” him into the yard to clean up. (Id. at 108:21-109:4). Plaintiff acknowledges that he was responsible for keeping the yard’s loading and unloading areas clean and organized, but says doing the actual cleaning of the yard was not part of his job responsibilities. (Id. at 119:15-120:3, p. 130). Rather, he contends this was a task he was to supervise other employees in performing.

(Id. at 119:15-120:3). Plaintiff viewed being required to clean the yard insulting and demeaning because he “is a professional” and “wasn’t originally hired to [do] cleaning.” (Id. at 113:5-12). B. Plaintiff complains to Gwinette MSB’s handbook includes an Equal Employment Opportunity (“EEO”) Policy that identifies Richard Shea III as the company’s EEO Officer responsible for administering and promoting an active program of equal employment opportunity. (Doc. # 27-3 at 5-6). The EEO policy did not identify where employees should file a discrimination complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
Jorge A. Otero-Acevedo v. Morris-Shea Bridge Company, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jorge-a-otero-acevedo-v-morris-shea-bridge-company-inc-alnd-2026.