KORTOR v. THE FOREST AT DUKE

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 30, 2024
Docket1:23-cv-00834
StatusUnknown

This text of KORTOR v. THE FOREST AT DUKE (KORTOR v. THE FOREST AT DUKE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KORTOR v. THE FOREST AT DUKE, (M.D.N.C. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA

ALICE KORTOR, ) Plaintiff, v. Case No. 1:23CV834 THE FOREST AT DUKE and LEE ANN BAILEY-CLAYTON, ) Defendants. ) )

ORDER This matter is before the Court on Motions to Dismiss [Docs. #20, #24] filed by Defendants The Forest at Duke (hereinafter “TFAD”) and Lee Ann Bailey-Clayton, respectively. According to the Amended Complaint [Doc. #15], Plaintiff Alice Kortor worked at TFAD as a nurse, and Defendant Bailey-Clayton was one of her supervisors. Plaintiff filed the instant matter in response to her termination from TFAD in July 2022. Defendants move to dismiss the Amended Complaint in its entirety pursuant to Federal Rule of Ctvil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failing to state a claim. The Court concludes that, Defendant TFAD’s Motion to Dismiss should be denied and that Defendant Bailey-Clayton’s Motion to Dismiss should be granted in part. I. FACTS, CLAIMS, AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY According to the Amended Complaint, Plaintiff is a black African woman from Liberia with a “thick accent.” (Am. Compl. [Doc. #15] §[§] 17, 40, 49, 52.) Plaintiff worked for

Defendant TFAD as a Certified Nurse Assistant and helped elderly patients suffering from, among other conditions, dementia. (Am. Compl. {J 18-19.) Plaintiff alleges that at vatious points prior to Januaty 4, 2022, she experienced acts of discrimination in the workplace which she attributed to her race or national origin. (Am.

Compl. § 39.) During one such incident, in November 2020, a co-worker stated that he “wished Donald Trump would get his way and ban all immigrants from America, so that [Plaintiff] would go back to Aftica.” (Am. Compl. 41.) Plaintiff alleges that she reported this incident to her supervisor, Defendant Lee Ann Bailey-Clayton, who is white, but TFAD

nevet investigated the allegation. (Am. Compl. {ff 6, 42.) Plaintiff alleges that shortly after she made this report, Defendant Bailey-Clayton stopped allowing Plaintiff to work overtime shifts, while permitting other nurses to do so, and also told other supervisors not to give Plaintiff any extra shifts. (Am. Compl. {f] 43-44, 60.) Plaintiff further alleges that Defendant Bailey-Clayton herself began to bully Plaintiff over her “thick accent” and made her “feel stupid.” (Am. Compl. §{] 40, 52.) Plaintiff alleges that she spoke directly to Defendant Bailey-Clayton to attempt to address this conduct, but Defendant Bailey-Clayton did not alter her behavior. (Am. Compl. {[f] 45-46.)' According to the Amended Complaint, on January 4, 2022, a white patient with dementia asked Plaintiff to help her leave the nursing home in which she resided, despite

1 Other than the November 2020 incident, the timeline of when this conduct occurred and how often is vague in the Amended Complaint. For example, Plaintiff alleges that she spoke to Defendant Bailey-Clayton about the discrimination on an unspecified date and, afterwatd, on similarly unspecified dates, “more retaliatory behavior and unsubstantiated write-ups” occutted. (See Am. Compl. { 45.) However, a fair reading of the Amended Complaint would be that the alleged discrimination occurred between November 2020, which appeats to be a precipitating event for the subsequent conduct by Defendants, and January 2022, when the primary allegations of the Amended Complaint occurred.

apparently not being permitted to leave on her own. (Am. Compl. ff] 20-21.) This patient had made similar requests before and so Plaintiff “kindly informed her that she could not leave.” (Am. Compl. § 21.) The patient became frustrated with Plaintiff's refusal to help and, in response, falsely reported to Defendant Bailey-Clayton that Plaintiff had pushed her. (Am. Compl. § 22.) In response to this false report of physical abuse, Plaintiff “followed protocol and provided a list of nurses that were present in the room who all stated that no abuse or pushing took place.” (Am. Compl. J 24.) On January 10, 2022, TFAD suspended Plaintiff pending the results of an investigation into the patient’s report of abuse. (Am. Compl. § 25.) TFAD also notified the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services (hereinafter “DHHS”), about the report of abuse and, on January 10, 2022, informed DHHS that TFAD’s investigation of the incident had “substantiated the allegations reported by the patient and saw visible signs of injury due to alleged bruising.” (Am. Compl. {{] 26-27.) TFAD also “reported to DHHS that [Plaintiff] was terminated effective 11 January 2022.” (Am. Compl. J] 28.) However, no information about TFAD’s investigation was provided to Plaintiff, who believed that her continued employment would be dependent on the results of the DHHS’s investigation into the incident. (Am. Compl. {J 29, 35.) Plaintiff was later informed by the

nutses who witnessed the incident that they had not been questioned as part of the TFAD investigation. (Am. Compl. 24, 31.) DHHS conducted its own investigation and on May 10, 2022, informed Plaintiff that it had “determined that the allegations from [the] patient were not substantiated.” (Am.

Compl. 33.) Plaintiff alleges that, unlike TFAD during its investigations, DHHS contacted the nurses Plaintiff had identified as witnesses. (Am. Compl. {| 32.) After the patient’s report of abuse was found to be unsubstantiated by DHHS, Plaintiff sought to be restored as an employee at TFAD. However, on July 7, 2022, TFAD refused to reinstate Plaintiff and upheld her termination. (Am. Compl. {| 35-36.) Plaintiff filed an EEOC charge alleging discrimination on October 7, 2022, and subsequently received an EEOC tight-to-sue letter on July 12, 2023. (Am. Compl. {| 2.) Plaintiff filed suit in this Court on September 29, 2023 [Doc. #1], naming only TFAD as a defendant. IFAD moved to dismiss [Doc. #9], and Plaintiff then filed her Amended Complaint [Doc. #15], naming both TFAD and Bailey-Clayton as defendants. Plaintiff brings two counts against Defendants: (1) race discrimination under Title VU and § 1981; and (2) retaliation under Title VII and § 1981. (Am. Compl. at 1, 6-8.) Defendants have now moved for dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted [Docs. #20, #24]. Though presented in two separately-filed briefs, Defendants jointly raise four identical arguments for dismissal: 1. Plaintiff failed to timely file an EEOC charge for the conduct underlying the Title VII claims and for this reason all Title VII claims, in Counts I and II, should be dismissed (TFAD Br. [Doc. #21] at 4-7; Bailey-Clayton Bt. [Doc. #25] at 4-7); 2. Plaintiffs allegations of race disctimination are conclusory and therefore the Title VII and § 1981 claims in Count I should be dismissed (TFAD Br. at 7-9; Bailey-Clayton Br. at 7-10); 3. Plaintiff failed to allege that race was a “but for” cause of her treatment at work and therefore the § 1981 claims, in Counts I and II, should be dismissed (IFAD Br. at 9-11; Bailey-Clayton Br. at 10-11); and

4. Plaintiff did not sufficiently plead a plausible link between her protected activity and subsequent retaliation and therefore the Title VII and § 1981 claims in Count II should both be dismissed (TFAD Br. at 11-14; Bailey-Clayton Br. at 11-14). In addition to these joint arguments, Defendant Bailey-Clayton individually argues that: 5. Any Title VII claims against her should be dismissed because she is not an employer and thus cannot be held liable under that Title. (Batley-Clayton Br. at 3-4.) Il. LEGAL STANDARD The Supreme Court has held that “an employment discrimination plaintiff need not plead a prima facie case of discrimination . . . to sutvive [a] motion to dismiss,” because “[t]he prima facie case . . . is an evidentiary standard, not a pleading requirement.” Swierkiewicz v. Sorema N.A., 534 U.S. 506, 510, 515 (2002).

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KORTOR v. THE FOREST AT DUKE, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kortor-v-the-forest-at-duke-ncmd-2024.