Koonce v. Austin

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJuly 28, 2022
Docket3:21-cv-00660
StatusUnknown

This text of Koonce v. Austin (Koonce v. Austin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koonce v. Austin, (E.D. Va. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA Richmond Division ERIC KOONCE, Plaintiff, v. Civil Action No. 3:21cv660 LLYOD J. AUSTIN, III, SECRETARY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE, Defendant. OPINION In 2012, the plaintiff Eric Koonce filed an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) complaint against his employer, the Department of Defense. Later, in 2016, the plaintiff filed another EEOC complaint claiming that he faced retaliation from his employer for filing the 2012 EEOC complaint. The plaintiff contends that the defendant retaliated against him in the years following the first EEOC complaint by: (1) denying the plaintiff the opportunity to cross-train in other departments; (2) placing an e-mail in the plaintiff's personnel file that could potentially negatively affect future employment opportunities; and (3) mishandling a message from the Red Cross that delayed the plaintiff from seeing his dying grandmother before she passed. The plaintiff now brings this action under the Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII’). The defendant moves to dismiss all three of the plaintiff's retaliation claims for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted because the plaintiff has not pleaded a causal connection between the protected activity and the allegedly retaliatory employment actions. The Court agrees and finds that the plaintiff's claims against the defendant fail because he cannot demonstrate causation.

I. FACTS ALLEGED IN THE COMPLAINT The plaintiff worked as a Material Handler (Forklift Operator) Leader for the Defense Commissary Agency (an agency within the Department of Defense) at Gemersheim Central Distribution Center in Gemersheim, Germany. (ECF No. 3-1, at 2; ECF No. 3, at 791.)! After the plaintiff's mother suffered an illness in 2012, the plaintiff's family notified the Red Cross of the emergency, who then informed the plaintiff's managers. (ECF No. 3, at 7 93.) Notification from the Red Cross entitled the plaintiff to take leave to care for his mother. (/d.) Lack of timely notice by the defendant, however, prevented the plaintiff from taking leave as soon as he could have. (Jd.) Later in 2012, the plaintiff filed an EEOC claim against the defendant. (/d. at 9 17.) After the 2012 EEOC claim, the plaintiff noticed a pattern in the defendant’s refusal to cross-train him. (/d. at 7 96.) In 2015, the plaintiff submitted his resume to Karen Sandvoss, the manager of Inventory Management, to apply to attend a training program. (Jd. at 8 J 15.) He had not yet received any additional training as a work leader, despite having the position for ten years. (/d. at 7, 9 9] 6, 16.) Sandvoss instead chose other work leaders for the training. (Jd. 76.) The plaintiff asked Panissee Stewart, the Supervisory Distribution Facility Specialist, why he had not been chosen for the training. (/d. at 8 7 15.) Stewart indicated that the plaintiff was not chosen because of his resume. (/d.) Stewart then asked to see the plaintiff's resume and later commented that Sandvoss must not have looked at it. (Jd.) In February 2016, the plaintiff asked to cross-train in multiple departments, but his managers denied the request. (/d. at 7, 9 6, 17.) In denying the request, managers relayed to the plaintiff that short staffing issues prevented the plaintiff from receiving cross-training. (Jd. at

' The Court employs the pagination assigned by CM/ECF docketing system.

746.) Other employees, however, like Oliver Hoess and Jamal Alston, did cross-train in multiple departments. (See id. at 8 J 13.) Stewart later indicated that Hoess and Alston received supervisory positions in February 2016 because of the training that they received. (/d. at 8-9 12, 16.) Besides being denied training opportunities, the plaintiff noticed other impediments to his career due to the defendant’s actions. Concerning future employment prospects, the plaintiff received a tentative job offer within the Department of Defense in February 2013. (See id. at J 10.) A Human Resources Specialist then withdrew the tentative offer of employment because the plaintiff lacked a driver’s license, which the position required. (See id. at 8 § 10; ECF No. 9-1, at 1-2.) The Human Resources Specialist copied Dennis Heggins, a store manager, on the original withdrawal e-mail to the plaintiff. (ECF No. 9-1, at 2-3.) Heggins then forwarded the e-mail to others. (/d. at 2.) Heggins admitted forwarding the e-mail in order to inform higher management that the plaintiff did not have a license, which “Heggins believed could in fact block [the plaintiff] from getting offers.” (ECF No. 3, at 8 ff 10-11.) Liliane Flagler, a Supervisory Operation Support Specialist who received Heggins’s forwarded e-mail, maintains personnel files. (/d. 8-9.) She claimed that she did not know about the plaintiff's 2012 EEOC complaint. (/d. 48.) “According to Flagler, after the incident in 2012, she printed out the email and placed it in [the plaintiff's] local folder in February 2013 as a paper trail to remind herself what had occurred.” (/d. 4.9.) The plaintiff did not know that the e-mail

2 The plaintiff describes Hoess and Alston as his “listed comparators.” (/d. at 8912.) The plaintiff believes that neither individual had filed a previous EEOC complaint. (See id. { 13.) 3 The Court can consider documents outside of the complaint, as long as “the document [is] integral to the complaint and there is no dispute about the document’s authenticity.” Goines v. Valley Cmty. Servs. Bd., 822 F.3d 159, 166 (4th Cir. 2016). Here, the 2013 e-mail is integral to the complaint because the plaintiff references the contents in his complaint. (See ECF No. 3, at 8 4 10.) He also has not disputed the authenticity of the 2013 e-mail.

existed in his file until February 2016. (/d. at 797.) The plaintiff “has not had any offers of reassignments since the 2013 offer” because the 2013 e-mail in his file has had the effect of blocking other offers. (/d. at 8 § 11.) In April 2016, the plaintiff's grandmother suffered a brain injury and became gravely ill. (id. at 7, 9 49 4, 18.) The plaintiff's family sent a Red Cross message explaining the situation, which Michael Pettitt, the Distribution Facility Manager, received while at home on April 25, 2016, at 6:00 P.M. Cd. J§ 4, 19.) Pettitt claims that he gave the message to the plaintiff the next day at 7:30 A.M. (/d. at9 419.) The plaintiff did not see Pettitt on April 26, though, because Pettitt went to an air base that day. (/d. ff] 19-20.) Instead, Stewart told the plaintiff about the Red Cross message at 9:30 A.M. on April 26. (/d. 920.) Stewart then told the plaintiff that Stewart did not have time to take care of the “issue” because he needed to leave to get his car inspected.

Two days later, Stewart signed the plaintiffs initial leave form to allow the plaintiff to return to the U.S. (/d. Jf 21, 23.) Stewart indicated that Pettitt needed to approve the leave request as well. (fd. 421.) Pettitt later claimed that the plaintiff was given a letter allowing him to take a military plane back to the United States. (/d.) The plaintiff did not receive that letter and, even if he had, still needed Pettitt to approve the leave form. (/d.) On April 29, four days after Pettitt received the Red Cross message, Stewart signed the plaintiff's final leave request. (/d. ] 23.) Two hours before the plaintiff departed for the airport on May 1, the plaintiff found out that his grandmother had passed away. (/d.) Comparing the 2012 delay with his mother and the 2016 incident with his grandmother, the plaintiff states that “it is cruel to do this to someone’s family even if you are upset that they filed an EEO complaint.” (/d.) The plaintiff knows other employees who have not previously

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Bluebook (online)
Koonce v. Austin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koonce-v-austin-vaed-2022.