Katherine Henderson v. Chrysler Group LLC

610 F. App'x 488
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 1, 2015
Docket14-2032
StatusUnpublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 610 F. App'x 488 (Katherine Henderson v. Chrysler Group LLC) 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.

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Katherine Henderson v. Chrysler Group LLC, 610 F. App'x 488 (6th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

SILER, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Katherine Henderson (“Henderson”) appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Chrysler Group LLC (“Chrysler” or the “Company”). The district court found that Henderson failed to establish a prima fa-cie case of retaliation under the Family Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”), 29 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq., and the American with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq. The court recognized that, even if Henderson established a prima facie case under the ADA, she failed to show that Chrysler’s reasons not to rehire her — performance issues — were a pretext for disability discrimination. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Henderson worked for Chrysler in various positions from 1986 until she was laid off in August 2011. She served in her final position at Chrysler as a Talent Acquisition (“TA”) Placement Manager within the TA department from May 2007 until June 2011 when the position was outsourced. As a TA Placement Manager, Henderson recruited and placed candidates in open positions within various departments (known as customers) at Chrysler.

Following Chrysler’s bankruptcy in 2009, the demand for hiring increased significantly. In 2010, Chrysler decided to outsource the TA department to a company named “The Right Thing.” Al TA Placement Managers, including Henderson, were notified that their positions would be outsourced by June 2011. Henderson admitted that it was ultimately each employee’s responsibility to find another position at Chrysler, which planned to redeploy every employee who desired to be redeployed from the TA department to another department. Henderson also admitted that her job was not outsourced due to any leave (under the FMLA or otherwise) that she had taken or any disability that she may have had.

Lisa Wicker (“Wicker”) was the executive responsible for the TA department. From 2009 through 2011, Wicker oversaw the TA department and served as Henderson’s boss. Henderson initially reported directly to Wicker until Wicker hired senior management — individuals more senior than Henderson — within the TA department to assist with the post-bankruptcy increased hiring needs. Wicker first hired Michelle Cook to whom Henderson reported directly. Subsequently, Joe Delikat (“Delikat”), who was a colleague of Henderson’s for a three-month period in 2010, became a senior manager and then became Henderson’s immediate supervisor in March 2011. Before Wicker hired senior management for *490 the TA department, Henderson also reported to Kathryn Lee (“Lee”), a member of senior management in the human resources (“HR”) department.

During this two-year period, Wicker received numerous complaints about Henderson’s performance. Lee approached Wicker to discuss her concerns regarding Henderson’s performance. Among Lee’s concerns were that Henderson missed work, worked from home when she was not authorized to do so, and was not customer-focused. Henderson’s inattentiveness was confirmed by one of her customers, Rich Du-brava (“Dubrava”). Dubrava was unhappy with Henderson’s performance because she was not responsive to his requests. In the fall of 2010, Wicker informed Henderson that she, along with Henderson’s supervisors and customers, was disappointed with Henderson’s work performance. Wicker told Henderson about various tasks that Henderson let slip through the cracks that either Wicker or Henderson’s teammates had to address.

Wicker prepared Henderson’s performance reviews in 2010 and 2011, which were for the 2009 and 2010 calendar years, respectively. Henderson’s performance review for the 2010 calendar year, conducted in January 2011, was sub-par. Henderson’s performance review for the 2010 calendar year revealed the following deficiencies:

Her “work in 2010 was inconsistent in delivery, timeliness as well as commit- ■ ment.”
“Her customer’s [sic] concerns were numerous due to lack of her follow-up and commitment to get tasks accomplished when expected.”
Her “overall performance lacked the appropriate follow-up, customer focus and delivery timeliness expected. Some of the work that [Henderson] was to complete, was done so in spite of her in-actions [sic]. For example, on several occasions either the Director of TA responded to emails on her behalf or one of her team mates performed worked [sic] that she was required to do because she had not responded to the customer or the needs of the department.”

Several months after Henderson’s performance review for 2010 and after Delikat became her supervisor in March 2011, De-likat began receiving feedback from Henderson’s customers about her performance. Delikat testified that at least three of Henderson’s customers — Dubrava, Lisa Giese and Kristi Mandoky — complained about her performance. The primary concern raised by the customers was that Henderson was nonresponsive and inattentive. Her customers were unhappy with the amount of time it took her to acknowledge and to respond to their requests.

Delikat testified that, from March through early May 2011, he was concerned with Henderson’s sporadic attendance at work. It was Delikat’s belief that her sporadic attendance was due to “absenteeism,” which was later recorded as vacation time. He specifically testified that he would not have approved the number of days that Henderson took off had she asked for vacation days in advance because the TA department was very busy during that period and had a very heavy workload. Delikat and Wicker exchanged emails about their concern that Henderson was frequently working from home despite the fact that Chrysler did not have a policy in place to permit individuals in Henderson’s position to work from home. The testimony from Henderson’s supervisors and customers established that they felt it was important for TA Placement Managers to be at work and available to assist with recruiting and placing candidates in open positions at Chrysler.

*491 During the first week of May 2011, Henderson’s daughter became ill and could not attend school for the week. On Tuesday morning, she took her daughter to the doctor and then worked from home in the afternoon. The following day, Henderson stayed with her daughter and again worked from home. On Friday, Henderson made the decision to take her daughter back to the doctor. Later that day, Henderson went into the office.

On or before May 10, 2011, Wicker, Deli-kat and a representative from the HR department decided to place Henderson on a performance improvement plan (“PIP”). However, Henderson was never placed on the PIP because the day after they made the decision to do so, she announced that she would be taking an extended leave.

Henderson had an appointment with her rheumatologist on May 10, 2011 — the same day that Chrysler decided to place her on a PIP. That evening, Henderson called Delikat to inform him that her physician strongly advised that she begin biologic medical treatment for her rheumatoid arthritis. She told Delikat that she expected to return to work in about a month.

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610 F. App'x 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katherine-henderson-v-chrysler-group-llc-ca6-2015.